Evaldsson2012
Evaldsson2012 | |
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BibType | INCOLLECTION |
Key | Evaldsson2012 |
Author(s) | Ann-Carita Evaldsson, Johanna Svahn |
Title | School Bullying and the Micro-Politics of Girls’ Gossip Disputes |
Editor(s) | Susan Danby, Maryanne Theobald |
Tag(s) | gossip dispute, children, Swedish, multiethnic schools, membership categorization analysis, conversation analysis |
Publisher | Emerald |
Year | 2012 |
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City | New York |
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Pages | 297–323 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1108/S1537-4661(2012)0000015016 |
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Howpublished | |
Book title | Disputes in Everyday Life: Social and Moral Orders of Children and Young People |
Chapter |
Abstract
Purpose – In this chapter, we examine an extended gossip dispute event, in which a peer group of 11-year-old girls take action against a girl who has reported about school bullying to the teacher by examining how the accused girls construct their own sociopolitical order away from the adults.
Approach – The analysis draws on ethnographic fieldwork within a Swedish multiethnic school setting combined with detailed analysis (conversation analysis and membership categorization analysis) of children's language practices.
Findings – It is found that the school's bullying intervention practice sets the stage for a trajectory of a gossip dispute event in which the accused girls work out their own version of the telling as snitching, reallocate blame, and project the future consequences for the girl being accountable for the telling. A moral order emerges via the organization of social actions, alignments, occasion-specific identities, and pejorative person descriptors, rendering the event of telling the teacher a disastrous move for the targeted girl. The micro-politics of the extended gossip dispute is pervasive in terms of how the accused girls strengthen social alignments of power, depict the transgressor by categorizing her as insane, and remedy the norm breaches through justifying their own actions.
Social implications – The success with which the girls here manage to turn the school's bullying intervention practice into a system of retaliation emphasizes the need for highlighting the micro-politics, of children's everyday practices away from adults.
Notes