Symbolic Power for Beginners: The Very First Social Efforts to Control Others’ Actions and Perceptions

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Abstract

Becoming a social agent requires the ability to gain some power over others’ actions and perceptions. For that purpose, symbolic practices and language matter, especially when physical means of control are unavailable, ineffective, or illegitimate. Based on an in-depth ethnographic study, I analyze such a process of symbolic empowerment from the viewpoint of very young practitioners: children age 2 to 3 years. I explore the symbolic means through which toddlers seek control over adults, from simple signals, naming, and politeness to basic fictionalization. Children’s social backgrounds, not just age and development, inform their tendency to affect adults through words. The content of symbolic practices is determined by preexisting social hierarchies between persons, groups, and institutions. In fact, the crucial challenge for young children is to take advantage of these hierarchies by publicly putting them in line with their own emerging interests.

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Lignier, W. (2021). Symbolic Power for Beginners: The Very First Social Efforts to Control Others’ Actions and Perceptions. Sociological Theory, 39(4), 201–224. https://doi.org/10.1177/07352751211050660

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