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Unit 1: Families and households
2) Childhood
Interpretation
• In essays, explain the idea of social
construction of childhood near the start and
use it as a framework for your answer
Ruth Benedict (1934): C.C. Differences
• Differences between SIMPLE, NON-INDUSTRIAL societies and
their MODERN COUNTERPARTS:
• More responsibility at an early age (Punch’ 2001 study in
Bolivia)
• Less value placed on obedience/adult authority (Firth’s
1970’s study in Tikopia  concession, not a right by the
adult)
• Children’s sexual behaviour is often viewed differently
(Malinowski in Trobriand Island: adults attitude 
“tolerance and amused interest” towards sexual exploration)
Also, the behaviour expected of children and that expected
of adults are less clearly seperated
Social construct
Jane Pilcher (1995): M.W.N
• The key feature of the modern idea of childhood is
separateness
• Seen a separate, distinct life stage
• Childhood is seen as a special, innocent time of life
• They are seen as fundamentally different from adults-
as physically immature and not competent to run their
own lives’
 Similarly, according to Cunningham (2007), children
are seen as the opposite as adults, with the right to
happiness
 These differences illustrate the key sociological idea
that childhood is not fixed in the same form in all
societies – different cultures construct it differently
Social construct
Analysis
• Contrast childhood in traditional and modern
societies using concepts like
status, separateness, competence and
responsibility
Aries (1960): H.D.
• According to Aries, in medieval Europe, the idea of
childhood did not exist
• Children were not seen as having a different ‘nature’
to adults
• Work began from an early age
• Children were ‘mini adults’ with the same
rights, duties and skills as adults
 Similarly, according to Shorter (1975), parental
attitudes towards children were very different , e.g.
high child death rates encouraged indifference and
neglect, especially towards infants
Application
• Avoid lengthy descriptions of Aries
• Instead, explain the significance of his work
and give some examples
Cont. Aries (1960): M.N
• The modern notion of childhood began from the 13th
century
• Schools began to specialise only in the education of the
young
• The church increasingly saw children as fragile
‘creatures of God’ needing discipline and protection
from worldly evils
• There was a growing distinction between children’s and
adult’s clothing, setting children apart from adults
 Aries argues that this resulted in the emergence in the
modern ‘cult of childhood’ the 20th century was the
‘century of the child’
Why has the position of children
changed
ADD ALL OF THIS INFO IN
Analysis
• Use these factors to draw contrasts with
medieval times and conclusions about how
childhood has been constructed differently
over time
Compulsory schooling
• Compulsory schooling
since 1880 has created
a period of dependency
on the family
• Separated children from
the adult world of work
Child Protection and Welfare Laws
• Child Protection, Welfare
Laws and agencies
emphasised children’s
vulnerability and made
their welfare a central
concern
The idea of children’s rights: 1989
• E.g. the Children Act
(1989) sees parents as
having ‘responsibilities’
towards their children
rather than ‘rights’
Laws about social behaviour
• E.g. Minimum ages
for a wide range of
activities, from sex to
smoking, reinforce
the attitude that
children are different
from adults (separate)
Industrialisation was the underlying
cause
• E.g. modern industry
needs and educated
workforce so
compulsory education
is needed; higher
standards of living
resulting from
industrialisation lead to
lower infant mortality
rates
Has the position of children
improved?
There are two competing views of whether children’s position has improved…
Interpretation
• If a question presents the view that children’s
position has improved, don’t just agree – start
by identifying the alternative view as-well
The ‘march of progress’ view
• Children are better cared for i.e. their
educational, psychological, and medical needs
• Most babies now survive: the infant mortality
rate was 154 in 1900, and now it is 5
• Higher living standards and smaller family
sizes means parents can afford to provide for
children’s needs
• Children are protected from harm and
exploitation by laws against child abuse and
child labour
The conflict view
• Conflict theorists e.g. Marxist and Feminists
argue that the ‘mach of progress’ view is an over-
generalised and idealised image
• It ignores inequalities (on 2 grounds):-
• Among children: in terms of opportunities and
risks they face: many today remain unprotected
badly cared for
• Between children and adults: inequalities here
are greater than ever children today
experience greater control, oppression and
dependency, not greater care and protection
Analysis
• Class, gender and ethnic differences affect life
chances in all societies
• So its hard to speak of improvements in the
position of children in general
Inequalities among children
• Third World children have different life
chances from those in the West
• In Western societies, there are:-
- GENDER DIFFERENCES: e.g. girls are expected
to do more housework
- ETHNIC DIFFERENCES: e.g. Asian parents are
more likely to be strict towards their
daughters than sons
- CLASS DIFFERENCES: e.g. poor children are
more likely to die in infancy or do badly at
school
Firestone (1979) and Inequalities
between children and adults
• Firestone (1979), a child liberationists, argues
that extensive care and protection are just new
forms of oppression
• E.g. being banned from paid work is not a
BENEFIT but is a form of INEQUALITY 
subjecting them to even greater adult control
Evaluation
• This ignores how adults may use their power
to benefit children e.g. passing laws against
child abuse
• Some adult control is needed to safeguard
children’s interests
Gittins (1998) and Age patriarchy
• Gittins (1998): claims there is an age patriarchy of
adult domination that keeps children subordinate
• E.g. Adults exercise control over children’s time (e.g.
bedtime), space (e.g. where they are allowed to go)
and bodies (e.g. what they eat and what they wear)
• Adults make children economically dependent by
preventing them from working e.g. through child
labour laws
• Adult control can lead to physical, sexual or
emotional abuse – over 30,000 children are on the
child protection register
Application
• Where possible, use examples to
illustrate key concepts such as age
patriarchy
Hockey and James (1993) + Resistance
• Children may resist the restricted status of
‘child’ by acting older
• E.g. smoking, drinking
alcohol, clubbing, driving e.t.c
• For Hockey and James (1993), this shows
modern childhood is a status most children
want to escape
The future of childhood
Postman (1994) + C.H is disappearing
• Postman (1994) argues that childhood as we
know it is disappearing
• Children are becoming more like adults –
gaining similar rights and acting in similar
ways e.g. clothing, leisure, even crime
• For Postman this is the result of television
culture replacing print culture
Cont. Postman (1994)+ Printing 
Television culture
In print culture
• Children lacked the literacy
skills needed to access
information
• So adults could keep
knowledge about
sex, money, violence, illnes
s, death and other ‘adult’
matters secret from them
Television Culture
• T.C. makes information
available to adults and
children alike.
• The boundary between
adulthood and childhood is
broken down adult
authority is weakened
Evaluation
• Postman over-emphasises a single
factor, ignoring others
• E.g. rising living standards and legal changes
Opie (1993) + C.H is not disappearing
• Based on a lifetime of research, a separate
children’s culture continues to exist in the form of
games, rhymes, songs, jokes etc.
• Claims that there is strong evidence of the
continues existence of a S.C.H culture over the
years
 Similarly, others argue that Western norms of
what childhood should be – a separate life
stage, based on the nuclear family and school 
are being exported globally
Western ‘childhood’ is not disappearing, but
spreading
Palmer (2006) + Toxic C.H
• Palmer (2006) argues that rapid technological and
cultural changes are damaging children’s
development
• E.g. junk food, computer games, intensive
marketing to children, the growing emphasis of
testing in education, long hours worked by parents
• UK youth are at or near the top of international
league tables for obesity, self-harm, drug and
alcohol abuse, violence and teenage pregnancies
• UNICEF (2007) ranked the UK 21st out of 25 for
children’s well-being
As a result, children are deprived of genuine
childhood
Evaluation
• Not all children are equally affected by
these trends – those in higher social
classes are less affected
• Such concerns reveal an anxiety that the
modern notion ‘C.H: innocent, need
protection’  under threat
CHANGE or CONTINUITY?
Some aspects of childhood suggest it may be disappearing or changing, others that it
is continuing
Lee (2001) + C.H is CHANGING V.COMPLEX
• Some aspects of childhood suggest it may be
disappearing or changing, others that it is
continuing
• Lee (2001) concludes that childhood has not
disappeared
• But it has become much more complex and
contradictory
• E.g. children are more important as consumers
but dependant on parents for their purchasing
power
Cont. C.H. CHANGING or CONTINUITY?
• The emphasis on children’s rights
• The length of time spent on education
• Children’s access to means of communication
• Growing similarities between children and
adults in leisure activities, dress, diet etc.
• Adult concerns about children’s
behaviour, discipline, and exposure to media
sex and violence

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Families and households: The changing nature of childhood

  • 1. Unit 1: Families and households 2) Childhood
  • 2. Interpretation • In essays, explain the idea of social construction of childhood near the start and use it as a framework for your answer
  • 3. Ruth Benedict (1934): C.C. Differences • Differences between SIMPLE, NON-INDUSTRIAL societies and their MODERN COUNTERPARTS: • More responsibility at an early age (Punch’ 2001 study in Bolivia) • Less value placed on obedience/adult authority (Firth’s 1970’s study in Tikopia  concession, not a right by the adult) • Children’s sexual behaviour is often viewed differently (Malinowski in Trobriand Island: adults attitude  “tolerance and amused interest” towards sexual exploration) Also, the behaviour expected of children and that expected of adults are less clearly seperated Social construct
  • 4. Jane Pilcher (1995): M.W.N • The key feature of the modern idea of childhood is separateness • Seen a separate, distinct life stage • Childhood is seen as a special, innocent time of life • They are seen as fundamentally different from adults- as physically immature and not competent to run their own lives’  Similarly, according to Cunningham (2007), children are seen as the opposite as adults, with the right to happiness  These differences illustrate the key sociological idea that childhood is not fixed in the same form in all societies – different cultures construct it differently Social construct
  • 5. Analysis • Contrast childhood in traditional and modern societies using concepts like status, separateness, competence and responsibility
  • 6. Aries (1960): H.D. • According to Aries, in medieval Europe, the idea of childhood did not exist • Children were not seen as having a different ‘nature’ to adults • Work began from an early age • Children were ‘mini adults’ with the same rights, duties and skills as adults  Similarly, according to Shorter (1975), parental attitudes towards children were very different , e.g. high child death rates encouraged indifference and neglect, especially towards infants
  • 7. Application • Avoid lengthy descriptions of Aries • Instead, explain the significance of his work and give some examples
  • 8. Cont. Aries (1960): M.N • The modern notion of childhood began from the 13th century • Schools began to specialise only in the education of the young • The church increasingly saw children as fragile ‘creatures of God’ needing discipline and protection from worldly evils • There was a growing distinction between children’s and adult’s clothing, setting children apart from adults  Aries argues that this resulted in the emergence in the modern ‘cult of childhood’ the 20th century was the ‘century of the child’
  • 9. Why has the position of children changed ADD ALL OF THIS INFO IN
  • 10. Analysis • Use these factors to draw contrasts with medieval times and conclusions about how childhood has been constructed differently over time
  • 11. Compulsory schooling • Compulsory schooling since 1880 has created a period of dependency on the family • Separated children from the adult world of work
  • 12. Child Protection and Welfare Laws • Child Protection, Welfare Laws and agencies emphasised children’s vulnerability and made their welfare a central concern
  • 13. The idea of children’s rights: 1989 • E.g. the Children Act (1989) sees parents as having ‘responsibilities’ towards their children rather than ‘rights’
  • 14. Laws about social behaviour • E.g. Minimum ages for a wide range of activities, from sex to smoking, reinforce the attitude that children are different from adults (separate)
  • 15. Industrialisation was the underlying cause • E.g. modern industry needs and educated workforce so compulsory education is needed; higher standards of living resulting from industrialisation lead to lower infant mortality rates
  • 16. Has the position of children improved? There are two competing views of whether children’s position has improved…
  • 17. Interpretation • If a question presents the view that children’s position has improved, don’t just agree – start by identifying the alternative view as-well
  • 18. The ‘march of progress’ view • Children are better cared for i.e. their educational, psychological, and medical needs • Most babies now survive: the infant mortality rate was 154 in 1900, and now it is 5 • Higher living standards and smaller family sizes means parents can afford to provide for children’s needs • Children are protected from harm and exploitation by laws against child abuse and child labour
  • 19. The conflict view • Conflict theorists e.g. Marxist and Feminists argue that the ‘mach of progress’ view is an over- generalised and idealised image • It ignores inequalities (on 2 grounds):- • Among children: in terms of opportunities and risks they face: many today remain unprotected badly cared for • Between children and adults: inequalities here are greater than ever children today experience greater control, oppression and dependency, not greater care and protection
  • 20. Analysis • Class, gender and ethnic differences affect life chances in all societies • So its hard to speak of improvements in the position of children in general
  • 21. Inequalities among children • Third World children have different life chances from those in the West • In Western societies, there are:- - GENDER DIFFERENCES: e.g. girls are expected to do more housework - ETHNIC DIFFERENCES: e.g. Asian parents are more likely to be strict towards their daughters than sons - CLASS DIFFERENCES: e.g. poor children are more likely to die in infancy or do badly at school
  • 22. Firestone (1979) and Inequalities between children and adults • Firestone (1979), a child liberationists, argues that extensive care and protection are just new forms of oppression • E.g. being banned from paid work is not a BENEFIT but is a form of INEQUALITY  subjecting them to even greater adult control
  • 23. Evaluation • This ignores how adults may use their power to benefit children e.g. passing laws against child abuse • Some adult control is needed to safeguard children’s interests
  • 24. Gittins (1998) and Age patriarchy • Gittins (1998): claims there is an age patriarchy of adult domination that keeps children subordinate • E.g. Adults exercise control over children’s time (e.g. bedtime), space (e.g. where they are allowed to go) and bodies (e.g. what they eat and what they wear) • Adults make children economically dependent by preventing them from working e.g. through child labour laws • Adult control can lead to physical, sexual or emotional abuse – over 30,000 children are on the child protection register
  • 25. Application • Where possible, use examples to illustrate key concepts such as age patriarchy
  • 26. Hockey and James (1993) + Resistance • Children may resist the restricted status of ‘child’ by acting older • E.g. smoking, drinking alcohol, clubbing, driving e.t.c • For Hockey and James (1993), this shows modern childhood is a status most children want to escape
  • 27. The future of childhood
  • 28. Postman (1994) + C.H is disappearing • Postman (1994) argues that childhood as we know it is disappearing • Children are becoming more like adults – gaining similar rights and acting in similar ways e.g. clothing, leisure, even crime • For Postman this is the result of television culture replacing print culture
  • 29. Cont. Postman (1994)+ Printing  Television culture In print culture • Children lacked the literacy skills needed to access information • So adults could keep knowledge about sex, money, violence, illnes s, death and other ‘adult’ matters secret from them Television Culture • T.C. makes information available to adults and children alike. • The boundary between adulthood and childhood is broken down adult authority is weakened
  • 30. Evaluation • Postman over-emphasises a single factor, ignoring others • E.g. rising living standards and legal changes
  • 31. Opie (1993) + C.H is not disappearing • Based on a lifetime of research, a separate children’s culture continues to exist in the form of games, rhymes, songs, jokes etc. • Claims that there is strong evidence of the continues existence of a S.C.H culture over the years  Similarly, others argue that Western norms of what childhood should be – a separate life stage, based on the nuclear family and school  are being exported globally Western ‘childhood’ is not disappearing, but spreading
  • 32. Palmer (2006) + Toxic C.H • Palmer (2006) argues that rapid technological and cultural changes are damaging children’s development • E.g. junk food, computer games, intensive marketing to children, the growing emphasis of testing in education, long hours worked by parents • UK youth are at or near the top of international league tables for obesity, self-harm, drug and alcohol abuse, violence and teenage pregnancies • UNICEF (2007) ranked the UK 21st out of 25 for children’s well-being As a result, children are deprived of genuine childhood
  • 33. Evaluation • Not all children are equally affected by these trends – those in higher social classes are less affected • Such concerns reveal an anxiety that the modern notion ‘C.H: innocent, need protection’  under threat
  • 34. CHANGE or CONTINUITY? Some aspects of childhood suggest it may be disappearing or changing, others that it is continuing
  • 35. Lee (2001) + C.H is CHANGING V.COMPLEX • Some aspects of childhood suggest it may be disappearing or changing, others that it is continuing • Lee (2001) concludes that childhood has not disappeared • But it has become much more complex and contradictory • E.g. children are more important as consumers but dependant on parents for their purchasing power
  • 36. Cont. C.H. CHANGING or CONTINUITY? • The emphasis on children’s rights • The length of time spent on education • Children’s access to means of communication • Growing similarities between children and adults in leisure activities, dress, diet etc. • Adult concerns about children’s behaviour, discipline, and exposure to media sex and violence