Too Much Fun: Toys as Social Problems and the Interpretation of Culture
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Symbolic Interaction
- Vol. 21 (2) , 197-212
- https://doi.org/10.1525/si.1998.21.2.197
Abstract
Toys are a frequent subject of contemporary claims concerning social problems. Rooted in our culture's longstanding ambivalence regarding leisure and its concerns about children's vulnerability, claims about troublesome toys also reflect anxiety about children's increased susceptibility to non‐familial influences, their growing access to toys, and an expanded toy industry, as well as an active social movement sector. Typically, these claims argue that toys represent undesirable values, and that children who play with the toys acquire those values. Parallel arguments may be found in claims regarding other forms of popular and material culture. Interactionists should be wary of making or accepting these claims, because rather than treating children's play as a topic (or empirical study, such claims locate meaning in objects, rather than actors.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Revitalizing the American Home: Children's Leisure and the Revaluation of Play, 1920-1940Journal of Social History, 1997
- Does play prepare the future?Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1994
- Creating Meat‐Eaters: The Child as Advertising Target1The Journal of Popular Culture, 1994
- Barbie Doll Culture and the American WaistlandSymbolic Interaction, 1993
- From a Raised Eyebrow to a Turned Back: The FCC and Children's Product-Related ProgrammingJournal of Communication, 1988
- Morally Controversial Leisure: The Social World of Gun CollectorsSymbolic Interaction, 1988
- Nineteenth-Century Toys and Their Role in the Socialization of ImaginationThe Journal of Popular Culture, 1984
- Barbie and Her PlaymatesThe Journal of Popular Culture, 1977
- War Toys and the Peace Movement*Journal of Social Issues, 1969
- Toward a Sociology of Toys: Inanimate Objects, Socialization, and the Demography of the Doll WorldThe Sociological Quarterly, 1967