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May be Ill Need a Pair of Levis Before Junior High?Child to youth trajectories and anticipatory socializationUniversity of Oslo, randi.wardahl{at}uv.uio.no Changing schools at the age of 12 also represents a change in social age identity. Children prepare for this change of age identity in different ways, and their strategies vary across sociocultural contexts as well as between individuals. In this article, some of these strategies are explored through ethnographic observation and interviews with Norwegian 12-year-olds preparing and anticipating a change of school, making use of Robert Mertons concept of anticipatory socialization. Mertons concept describes the building of personal abilities, alienation from ones former group and adaptation to new norms as social processes identifying change of social reference group. These terms are employed here to identify social processes initiating childrens orientation to a youth identity. The functions that material possessions fulfil are related to the ability to symbolically communicate both categorically and self-expressively a growing normative awareness and a sense of value.
Key Words: anticipatory socialization children consumer culture social age social identity
Childhood, Vol. 12, No. 2,
201-219 (2005) This article has been cited by other articles:
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