Bjork-Willen2012
Bjork-Willen2012 | |
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BibType | INCOLLECTION |
Key | Bjork-Willen2012 |
Author(s) | Polly Björk-Willén |
Title | Being Doggy: Disputes Embedded in Preschoolers' Family Role-Play |
Editor(s) | Susan Danby, Maryanne Theobald |
Tag(s) | Preschool Children, Disputes, Family Role-Play, Sweden |
Publisher | Emerald |
Year | 2012 |
Language | |
City | New York |
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Pages | 119–140 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1108/S1537-4661(2012)0000015009 |
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Howpublished | |
Book title | Disputes in Everyday Life: Social and Moral Orders of Children and Young People |
Chapter |
Abstract
Purposes – The overall aim of the chapter is to explore children's acting and disputing within a family role-play and highlight how different roles are argued upon and negotiated by the participants, both verbally and nonverbally.
Methodology – The chapter is drawn from a single play episode between five 6-year-old girls at a Swedish preschool. The analytical framework of the study is influenced by ethnomethodological work on social action focusing in particular on participants’ methodical ways of accomplishing and making sense of social activities.
Findings – The analyses show that the girls use a range of verbal and nonverbal resources to argue and accomplish the social order of the play (i) using past tense to display the factual past event status, and present tense to bid for upcoming events, (ii) building a mutual pretend understanding of places and objects that were used to configure nearness as well as distance in the girls’ interaction and relationship. Finally, the analyses clearly show that the significance of a pretend role is situated and depends on the social context in which it is negotiated.
Practical implications – To get acquainted with detailed analyses of children's pretend play can be useful for preschool teachers’ understanding of how children build relationships within the play, and hopefully awaken their interest to study children's play in depth in everyday practice.
Value of chapter – The present chapter contributes to a wider understanding of how social relationships are argued and negotiated by preschool girls within pretend family role-play.
Notes