Title: Play, Games, and Socialization
1Play, Games, and Socialization
2Why do Sociologists Find Play Interesting
Sociologically?
- George Herbert Mead play significant in the
development of an individuals sense of
generalized other and reflexivity - Mead Play involves the use of symbols and rules
as model for everyday life - Gregory Bateson play looks like reality (a nip
is like a bite) how do people and animals
establish a play frame in which the meaning of
actions differ?
3Socialization may be broadly defined as the
learning of skills and attitudes necessary for
playing given social roles within a social group.
- Note skills and attitudes
- Note given social roles
- Note a social group may participate in multiple
social groups
4Socialization is about learning to become a
particular kind of person
- How does one learn to be a boy or a girl?
- How does one learn to be a Christian or Muslim or
a Jew? - How does one learn to be a WASP or middle-class?
5How do people learn?
- By participating in that social group!
- Observation
- Some direct instruction, but much less than one
would get in a school
6Learning as participation in a social group
- Legitimate peripheral participation
- One never fully masters the role one plays in
that group one is always learning being a good
mother, for instance. - Over time, ones participation increases
gradually in engagement and complexity - Learning and living/participating in a social
group are therefore the same.
7Continuous Socialization From Children to Adults
- For Mead, play is crucial to childrens
development to adulthood. - Children are incomplete adults.
- Are children learning adult social roles?
8Discontinuous Socialization Childrens Peer
Culture
- But children have their own peer culture and
social groups (they are not simply participating
in adult worlds) - Socialization composed of breaks in the life
course (differences between the older children
and teenagers in Goodwin)
9Doing Things through Words
- I now pronounce you husband and wife (Austin,
How to Do Things with Words) - Differentiation of people not solely done
through the content of the speech, but also
through kinds of talk, p. 63
10Directives
- Definition, p. 65
- Many ways to make a request
- Direct vs. indirect (not the same as polite vs.
impolite), p.67 - Vary in the amount of social control speaker is
proposing to exert over the addressee, p.68 - Do directives reflect or do they constitute
relative status and power? p. 72
- Alison Bechdel,
- Fun Home (2006)