European Medi@Culture-Online http://www.european-mediaculture.org
Author: Moon, Hyesung / Lemish, Dafna / Aidman, Amy / Götz, Maya.
Title: The roel of media in childrens make believe worlds.
Source: http://www.br-online.de/jugend/izi/english/televizion/16_2003_1/e_goetz_ua.htm[25.08.2004]
Published with kind permission of the authors.
Maya Götz / Dafna Lemish / Amy Aidman / Hyesung Moon
The role of media in children's make-believe worlds
A cultural comparison of Germany, Israel, the USA and South Korea
Children seem to have quite similar make-believe worlds across cultural borders. Television plays a significant role in many fantasies, but only certain parts attractive for children are extracted. They serve to symbolize experience, to further the self-image and promote communication.
Children use the media, particularly television (Livingstone et. al., 2001). The significance is not only restricted to the reception situation; traces of television can be found in a whole variety of interaction contexts. Everyday observations, as in the case of the 4-year-old Xaver telephoning with Tinky-Winky or that of two 8-year-old girls crawling through afternoon day-home as The Lion King - the strongest women in the world - are nothing exceptional. As revealed in the other articles of this publication, TV characters like Ernie can also become kids' imaginary companions (Taylor, Rogge in this issue). This is not just a question of one simple "effect" of television viewing. What we see here are the indications of the meaning kids create in their use of television material - a link that has been demonstrated in a number of individual cases (e.g. Bachmair, 2002). Investigating this relationship between fantasy and media on an empirically broader scale is extremely difficult, however. Fantasies by their very nature are very intimate, not always conscious and frequently indescribable in words - especially for children. Consequently, if the significance of the media is to be investigated, many customary procedures will hardly prove suitable. Experimental studies, in which children are required to continue telling a disrupted story (Greenfield,1981; Ruco, 1984, Greenfield, 1986) or the observation of fantasy play after the viewing of specific programmes (Valkenburg, 1994) are one possibility. In the multi-national IZI study "The role of media in children's make-believe world" we pursued another course. We offered children in four countries the possibility for daydreaming and then had them explain to us what they had imagined. We went about our search for traces of media afterwards.
Our focus in the wide
subject area of children's make-believe worlds is on "big
daydreams", a concept describing what children have previously
imagined on a number of occasions, usually during the day, perhaps
sometimes at night, too. During a uniformly constructed fantasy
journey - accompanied by music and a read aloud text - the children
in all four countries imagined themselves in their "big
daydream". Afterwards they drew that daydream, wrote several
sentences about it, and explained their make-believe world and
related media connections in individual interviews. Further data and
background information on the child's background, favourite media and
leisure activities etc, was provided by open-ended questionnaires
completed by parents and educators. The study was carried out in
Germany, Israel, South Korea, and the USA in order to reveal
preliminary cultural influences on these fantasies. The study focused
on the 8- to 10-year-old children. This age group still clearly
belongs to middle childhood, manifesting the cognitive skills for
differentiating between reality and fiction, capable of expressing
its inner thoughts verbally, and able to draw as well as to
autonomously put down ideas in writing in at least several
sentences.
The study was carried out in the spring and summer
2001, included both boys and girls and - when possible - typical
diversities of the respective country. In Germany the study took
place in cities and suburban areas in the north (Osnabrück), the
south (Munich) and the east (Dresden). In South Korea the study was
undertaken in Seoul and in the country; in the USA in small town
locations. Particularly exciting is the study group from Israel,
which included both Jewish children (from secular as well as
religious homes) and Arab children (Table 1). As is often the case in
qualitative studies, small samples were studied in each country,
which do not permit the development of valid generalizations based on
quantitative description and analysis. The real research goal is to
gain insights, reveal deeper connections, and point out qualitative
tendencies within the framework of a multi-national comparison.
60 children/ 37 girls
and 23 boys,
(city / countryside, North-, South-, East-Germany,
incl. children from ethnic minorities)
53 children / 25 boys
and 28 girls
(35 Jewish-secular, 6 Jewish-religious,
3
Muslim-Arab, 9 Christian-Arab, city / countryside, different classes)
37 children / 15 boys
and 22 girls,
(education-oriented middle class)
47 children / 22 boys
and 25 girls,
(city / countryside, middle class)
197 children/ 112 girls and 85 boys
The analysis of the
qualitative project focused on the child's picture of the
make-believe world and the story explained in writing and in the
interview. The information from educators and parents, in which
adults expressed their perspective of the child (and consequently of
themselves), was used as background information. Initially, every
individual case was thus reconstructed descriptively.
The
methodological orientation of the study is set particularly on the
"grounded theory" approach (Glaser, 1992). The
methodical-practical approach employed in typification procedures was
the agglomerative procedure, i.e. groups were clustered according to
similarities and differences, which subsequently provided the typical
variants (see Kluge, 2001, p. 257). The parameters of comparison in
this typology were:
The nature of the make-believe world
The child's place in the world and the wishes to act
Biographical and everyday life traces in the make-believe world
Media traces in the make-believe world
In October 2001, when we presented each other our collection of almost 200 pictures and stories, we immediately noticed several cultural differences, particularly in the type of portrayals, the painting techniques, etc. On the other hand, in terms of contents, we detected strong similarities we had not anticipated. At the same time it was also possible to identify special cultural features.
The children painted and spoke about foreign lands, towns and wonderful nature: worlds, in which they felt at ease, and could be what they wanted to be. The study shows an astonishingly high level of congruity with respect to the children's "big daydreams". Although the 197 children live in various parts of the world - with very different traditions and media offerings - it was possible to group the children's fantasies into nine categories based on the data:
The world of harmony with nature and animals
The world of conflict and threat
The world of sensual enjoyment
The world of amusement
The world of supernatural power
The world of technology, machinery invention
The world of travel
The world of the foreign land
The world of royalty
There seem to be typical patterns of "big daydreams" across cultural borders. Model examples of four of these worlds are:
Many children
imagined worlds in which utter harmony with nature and animals
prevailed. This is a world of peace and tranquillity, nature is lush
and beautiful, and all one has to do is to enjoy and be a harmonious
part of it.
Dana, a 9-year-old girl from Israel (case 11)
portrays her own paradise. It is a state of peace and harmony with
nature, set in a biblical context - the Garden of Eden:
In
my imaginary world I was in heaven. In heaven there were all kinds of
flowers, trees, birds, pleasant air, all kinds of things (…)
and a smiling sun. On the tree there is a baby-bird and an apple.
It's like Adam and Eve's garden, with the Tree of Knowledge. Nothing
will happen to us if we eat the apple, because we are a bit cleverer
than Adam and Eve. The sea is very deep and has dolphins, fish,
sharks (…) and lots of animals and also a Pokémon named
Togepy. All my friends, and my parents, and all the extended family,
and my uncles, and my friends, and cousins are there. Not in here are
the boys from class and those that I do not know. There are no
shelves and other people, no stores, only tents (…) you may
have tea there, because there are herbs and salad. There is no
school, it is vacation all the time. You can play, go on walks, swing
on the swings (…) you can see the sun shining, and you can see
the winter when the leaves fall down. You can see the flowers
blooming, and the trees growing. I walked to the trees to climb on
them, and found animals to raise, and grow flowers, so as to improve
heaven a little bit.
The theme in Dana's make-believe world is
harmony with nature and animals, living with her family and friends
in open nature. The sea is full of real and invented sea creatures,
even a Pokémon finds its way into paradise. You can play
there, go for walks, and ride on swings. You can see the flowers in
bloom and watch the trees grow. Obligations like attending school do
not exist in this world, it is always holidays. Dana looks after
animals and flowers - her contribution to paradise (Fig. 1).
On the other hand, children also talk about make-believe worlds full of conflicts and fighting. They refer to Digimon or Dragon Ball Z battles; kingdoms have to be protected and dinosaurs threaten the peace. Mainly boys' fantasies fell into this group. They use their magic powers and special abilities to rescue themselves and their loved ones. They conquer their foes, take up special positions and provide order in their fantasized worlds. In his make-believe world, "Under the Sea", 8-year-old Yun'sang (case 6, South Korea) sets out for the bottom of the sea to watch a fight with a leopard who threatens all the other sea creatures. Yun'sang is on the side of the good sea creatures. He is the main figure in his make-believe world, although he cannot be seen in the drawing (Fig. 2).
"Everything is peaceful here until the leopard turns up. The whale makes a noise the leopard doesn't understand and all the fish are warned. Then I start fighting. Here in the undersea world there are invisible animals, too, such as lions and flying horses that also fight for us. On the surface of the water sail ships with red flags. The ten fishermen on each ship really wanted to catch the fish and eat them, but because of the fight they have sailed a long way away. Now they can return and perhaps catch the leopard and perhaps a couple of fish, too - but anyway the leopard dies in the end."
In their fantasies children also emphasized the many "good things" in life, with all kinds of wonders to delight the senses. Wonderful rainbows materialize before the children's eyes. Birds sing and make children cheerful when they are sad; soft flowerbeds invite them to make themselves comfortable. But, above all there is lots of candy for them to eat: plantations of chocolate trees and trees with sticks of rock candy hanging down, walls made of butterscotch, and streets and trees made of gingerbread. Katrin (case 7, Germany) is 8 years old. Her make-believe world depicts a land where it is possible to eat candy non-stop without putting on weight:
"In gingerbread land everything is made of gingerbread: the houses, the castle and the people, too. Candy rains down from a cloud, every type you can imagine. You only have to make a wish, and down it rains. The sun fills the cloud up again, so there's always enough. In gingerbread land you can nibble everything, not the people but the houses. Then they have holes you have to fill again. You stick in gingerbread and seal it with icing. That's good fun because you can then lick your fingers. That's how the roads in gingerbread land are built. You simply put down some gingerbread, it rains icing, and the road is ready. In my gingerbread land there is always some candy, you never get fat because if you're candy you can't get fat."
There were worlds providing loads of fun and excitement without conflicts or dangers - fantasies with children flying on huge birds, experiencing thrilling times in amusement parks, selecting the film shown at the local cinema. One example is Ben (case 1, USA - Fig. 3):
"My dream place is an imaginary amusement park-a big one. There's a candy tree, a clubhouse, and an animal amusement park. There are a whole bunch of courses you can do like swing off the tree house, land on the trampoline, and jump into the pool. I'm running the obstacle course-swinging off the rope onto the trampoline and landing in the pool. Some of my friends are with me in the tree house and one friend is in the candy cane tree. The candy cane tree has all kinds of candy inside it. All of the people can go into the animal changer and when they become animals they can go into the animal amusement park. There are a lot of animals in there and they can go on all kinds of rides. The sign on the animal amusement park says "Animals Only" so you have to be an animal to go in and play on the rides. This amusement park is in my backyard and it's invisible. Only kids who are my friends can see it. Others will just walk right through it. The animal amusement park is floating. You can change into different kinds of animals. Inside there's a kind of computer. You type in something like bird or four-footed animal and then it gives you a whole variety of choices. You could say "cat", and then it would give you a whole variety of cats, cheetah or leopard or something. You could type that in and could push that and then you'd become that animal."
In their make-believe worlds children take action. Initially, of course, through imagining, painting and telling the make-believe world. But in their worlds they also imagine certain action situations they wish for themselves; they experience things that they would like to experience - these are their "desires to act". The reconstructions of the individual cases usually reveal two, or sometimes three desires for action, but only one comes clearly to the fore in most. When clustered in groups, six typical desires for action came to light:
Experiencing harmony: Experiencing harmony represents the key feature of their make-believe world for a number of girls and several boys. They imagine themselves in an intact world of tranquillity, without any stress or constant disputes. All evil, all danger is banned from this world. Their own experience is the centre of attention, but the world around them offers them the conditions needed. The children do actually participate in creating their world, but, first and foremost, they experience and enjoy it. Numerically, this is the largest cluster, dominated by the wish for this almost paradisiacal state.
Experiencing thrill: In one group containing very many boys the main priority is experiencing excitement: encountering adventures, waging battles or discovering something thrilling. Frequently repelling danger is the prime objective, crowned with success as a result of transformation or extension (e.g. by a powerful ally). This is a pleasurable, enjoyable experience.
Being special: Another typical desire to act is experiencing oneself as someone special or being acknowledged as special by others. This experience or acknowledgement can be associated with admiration, with the feeling of being the centre of attention or showing others one's superiority. But it can also be just the experience of staging a display of one's specialness without having to be acknowledged by others.
Being connected: Another group of typical wishes is experiencing a close bond with others (people or animals), "being in a relationship". The children refer to community and friendship. In their make-believe world they imagine themselves as part of a group or friendship they create as partners.
Protecting and being protected: A number of fantasies focus on the subject of protecting or being protected. The active or passive form can almost always be detected here in alternate rotation, i.e. relatively clear identificatory processes are in progress. In this respect, both are expressions of a category of typical desires to act.
Acting independently: Acting independently is the explicit core of a number of fantasies. The children wish to organize, stage-manage and effect something in their environment. They want to assume responsibility, to find their way autonomously and to form their environment. For this purpose they imagine a world around them where they are left in peace, a world they can naturally determine themselves.
Children's experiences are reflected in their make-believe worlds and desires to act. In a number of fantasies children's references to their own real life-world are apparent. For example, several children include friends in their make-believe world, while parents, on the other hand, appear more rarely. Pets play sometimes a significant role in their imagined world, as do places the children have visited on family trips. These references to concrete experiences are not only the children's allusions to real features in their lives but they also serve as the starting point for their daydreams. Several children integrate in this way a tale or story they have been told by a person who plays an important role in their lives.
You'jong (case 24, South Korea) dreams of a meeting with Jesus, about whom she has heard from her parents often before. Tessina (case 3, Germany) invents a paradise for animals, which she names "Seashells", following her mother's story about the Seychelles. Maroum (case 10, Israel) fantasizes about Switzerland, of which his father has told him so many good things.
Several fantasies reflect a particular identity-forming interest, which is also significant for daily life. The children have fantasies of horses, soccer matches, or sailing on ships, i.e. things they are particularly thrilled by in their own daily life. In several of the make-believe worlds children tune into pleasant experiences, such as holidays with the family or a visit to an amusement park, and develop them further. Similarly, they also select some negative experiences they have had and repair them in the fantasy world through creating different ending or changing several features.
Annelie (case 36, Germany) was on vacation with her parents, but not allowed to go swimming on her own. In her make-believe world she is granted that permission and goes swimming. A striking example is Noa's make-believe world (case 14, Israel), who dreams of being together with her dead mother on a beautiful deserted beach where nobody else is present.
Real experiences enter the children's fantasies and daydreams; they are individual elements or the starting point of the daydream. If the children are asked about their "big daydream," that is about their positive dream worlds, they turn these life-world experiences - whether encountered directly or related by a significant person in their lives - into something good for themselves and their desires to act.
A central theme of
the study was the analysis of traces of media discovered in
children's make-believe worlds. We wanted to know how children use
the "raw content material " derived from their
media-related experiences in their imagined worlds. Theoretically it
may be said that everything in the children's make-believe worlds is
somehow connected with the media. In our analysis, however, we
focused on the traces in children's dream worlds that evince a direct
link to the media. Sometimes these traces are explicit, i.e., when
the drawing closely resembles a well recognizable figure, or when in
the interview the child states a specific media text as the source
(e.g. the name of a book or a television programme). At other times
the media traces can be reconstructed through making an implicit
connection between the child's drawing and story and details in the
interview, even when the child does not refer to it in words.
The
connections between the make-believe worlds and the media vary in
intensity. They range from dream worlds that seem to stem entirely
from a media experience to those that reveal no direct traces
whatsoever. In approximately two thirds of the cases, either explicit
or implicit, clear media traces were evident. Television is the
primary medium, but other media such as computer games or books serve
as the starting point and part of the dream world. However, visual
media, i.e. television in particular, but also video cassettes, and
films, play the most significant role in the children's stories. This
is much in line with current research on children and media:
television remains the most dominant medium in European children's
lives, regardless of infiltration by new communication technologies
(Livingstone and Bovill, 2001). One exception is the central role
that computer games seem to play for boys in South Korea.
It is
frequently difficult to confine the media trace to one particular
medium or text, for children are directed by their interests and scan
a whole range of media for a certain theme (e.g. dinosaurs, horses).
They partly absorb complete media environments such as Pokémon,
and it becomes impossible to tell whether collecting cards, watching
the television series, going to see the cinema film, or playing the
computer games are the origin of the media trace.
Three typical
variants can be compiled from the reconstructed media traces:
settings, figures and stories.
Children brace from the particular medium a location, an environment, or a context. This can range from adopting the whole setting as background for their make-believe story to just selecting a single object or small element and planting it in a non-media related setting. Several dream worlds are completely media-dependent and follow the original text very closely (Figs. 4 and 5)
Udi's story (case 1, Israel), for example, takes place in the land of Harry Potter, based on the book series; Jack (case 25, USA) chose the setting of a popular television quiz show for his dream world: Who Wants to be a Millionaire? - Gui'hyong (case 4, South Korea) developed his story in the setting of the movie Jurassic Park.
Less clear is the case of the 8-year-old Katrin (case 7, Germany), for example. She stated that "Gingerbread Land" (see below) had its roots in a specific episode of the Saban cartoon series Bumpety Boo (Super RTL) viewed two weeks before the interview. Katrin adopts the setting of a certain sequence: in a quiz show the hero Ken and his talking car have won a trip to a Cockaigne, an imaginary land of ease and luxury, and eat their way through the castle. For Katrin, however, neither the general story (the quiz show, the fight between good and evil) nor the male heroes are relevant for her make-believe world. She only takes the Cockaigne element (Fig. 6).
In several cases the trace back to the medium is even less apparent at first sight. Here the children integrate only a selected object into their make-believe world. For example: Gyu'sang (case 34, South Korea) integrates a car from a computer game into his dream world, which is otherwise about electronic houses and magic powder. Narmeen (an Arab-Israeli girl; case 49, Israel) adds a bench to her drawing of a basketball game with her friends. They can sit on it and have a rest, as the girls do in her favourite Arab cartoon series, she said.
Another typical theme of media traces in children's dream worlds is the use of characters. Here again a wide variety of possibilities, ranging from the complete adaption of the personality and appearance of figures to selecting just a particular special ability, appearance, a name or a costume. Sometimes the links and similarities to the original figures are extremely clear. In other cases the character does not even appear in the picture and does not emerge until later when the background story is told (Figs. 7 and 8).
The Israeli girl Tali (case 6) dreams of singing on the stage side by side her favourite female singer. The German boy Robby (case 43) imagines that the dragon in the film Dragon Heart is his friend. Every evening before he falls asleep he tells him about what happened during the day. The South Korean boy Yon'uh (case 20) fantasizes two figures fighting around him. Both are adopted from an Internet flash animation: Mashimaro and Zolaman. The American girl Audrey (case 28) draws Pikachu, a key Pokémon figure in her picture.
Tanja (case 53, Germany) provides an illustration of adopting just marginal elements from a character. She draws herself in the magnificent princess's dress from the film Sissi to highlight her own specialness and create a romantic atmosphere around her. She does not use other elements of the film, such as the narrative regarding the role of the Emperor Franz-Joseph or Sissi's fate. They are not important for what she wants to feel, imagine, and express. A particularly insightful example to describe how children borrow from the media for personal use and their themes is presented by Omer (case 2, Israel - Fig. 9):
"In my fantasy the world is exclusively mine, and I am the ruler. I wear this very special suit. The red cape is like Superman's. That green there is my hands that I can climb everything with, like Spiderman, and the blue there is from a fire laser-beam weapon. The red is a belt with Pokémons. That lilac colour is my flying shoes, and the horns come from Batman's mask. I am the Grand Master, and I have a sword like in Star Wars. That area around me is my room. It's very, very big and has many over life-size figures. There is a carpet and a bed and many things for training like walls for climbing. There are weights for muscle training, too, like they do at the Olympics. There are also Pokémon figures, for example a giant Pikachu. In this world there are good people and bad people and a school in a mountain like Hogwart's school in Harry Potter. I have already graduated from there. And there are tropical plants like in a jungle, but pets, too, such as a dog. In the middle of my world there is a mysterious island like in Jules Verne, with many whales like in Moby Dick. When I sleep, I dream of the super powers of the TV heroes, but I have also added a bit from my own imagination."
Omer adopts the abilities and strengths from a whole range of media figures and integrated them all into one character. Strengthened by these powers he is immune to possible attacks and threats, he is powerful and virtually invincible in his many imaginary adventures.
In a number of
fantasies children adapt a certain narrative structure of the media
text, using it in their make-believe worlds as a kind of "backbone"
on which they base their own story. Ruben (case 40, Germany)
experiences travelling through space in a spaceship, based on the
story of the film Armageddon. Martin (case 22, USA) experiences a
part of Peter Pan's story in the film Hook. Jun'sik (case 29, South
Korea) follows the adventures of the story and the computer game
Kingdom of the Wind. Children integrate into their make-believe
worlds those parts that are interesting and attractive for them: in
Jun'sik's case, battles between knights and the life concept of
energy, which falls from the trees like leaves until one is dead for
a certain time. For Martin's daydream, (case 22, USA), the basketball
game is particularly interesting, a rather short scene in the film
Hook, when the now adult Peter Pan has to compete against the Lost
Boys to prove his worth.
But not only fictional texts feed into
children's fantasies. We found that also information from documentary
or science programmes can become the springboard for entire dream
worlds. For example, Dam'dok (case 40, South Korea) knows from
scientific programmes what the Earth looks like when seen from
outerspace. With his brother and father he floats up into space by
means of large balloons to grasp this phenomenon for himself. Kevin
(case 27, USA) has read a book on the American astronaut Neil
Armstrong and fantasizes of being a member of the crew. Together they
discover new worlds and occupy them for the USA. Tessina (case 3,
Germany) develops her story of providing a special place for
endangered animals around some bits of information on them she
learned from a television documentary.
One parameter cutting across the three categories of media traces is the aesthetic component of their drawings. Sometimes children use symbols from the media to refer to specific programmes, books or computer games. In this case symbols from the media represent the media themselves. But the kids also adopt special representation techniques to symbolize movement (for example, frequently drawing lines of movement as in comics), noises (ray-shaped symbolization, music notes), light (rays) - or they use balloons for representing verbal communication. Sometimes, however, they adopt the symbolization of complete concepts, as does Katja (case 29, Germany) who uses the UNICEF emblem to develop her make-believe world of living together in peace. Last but not least, the way of structuring stories and telling them to others is partly determined by the media, although there is not always detailed evidence to confirm this.
As we have discussed
above, children include a variety of media texts in their fantasies
in a variety of different ways, and they do it for a host of reasons
which can be summarized under three categories: for symbolizing
experience, to further the self-image and to facilitate
communication. In this process the children are active meaning makers
who choose to include elements from their everyday life, including
their media experiences, in their make-believe worlds. Children use
media to represent sensory experience or to symbolize their own
perception of themselves. They integrate particular media contents
while ignoring others, to impart a meaning to their own experience,
using them to express their own emotions.
Children employ media
stories to reflect their own experiences and as the starting point of
imagining and seriously developing their own pleasing stories. When
doing so, they can choose to remain relatively close to the media
stories or to only use fragments of them. But it is mostly their own
story they tell, using media material selectively, among other
things. The question of which media fragments pass into the kids'
fantasies and which they do not use is not primarily one of genre,
style, fiction or non-fiction. Rather, the decisive criteria is
whether they fit in the kids' themes and advance them. It must be
material with which the children can symbolize their experiences,
invent their own stories, and communicate with others. Neither is the
decisive element how spectacular is the media content or how much
action it contains. Rather, they need to offer condensed forms of
experience. They may contain detailed description, but must not be
confining for the child's imagination (see Neuss in this publication,
for example). Limitations arise when pre-defined notions in the text
run counter to the children's individual self-appraisal or values.
An
example for this line of interpretation is the reconstruction of the
case of Patricia (9 years, Germany, case 59). For months she has a
"big daydream" which she has been developing mainly at
school or also during her homework. She calls it "The Land of
Milk and Honey" (see Fig. 10):
"I dream of a land of milk and honey. This is great, because there are so many beds to sleep in and I really like sleeping. And besides this there are many fruit trees, which are always full of fruit. And in this land of milk and honey there are all Pokémon characters. And there are also humans, but only those who believe in Pokémons and love them. Others are not admitted in. Here there are my favourite Pokémons (at the moment): this is Snorlax, and he loves to sleep as much as I do. I'd also love to be Butterfree, because it can fly so nicely. Vileplume, a flower and I like flowers and Mew, my favourite Pokémon, which looks sooo cute and could explode half the globe, when he's angry, but that didn't happen so far. Well, then there is the Pokémon Tokepi, but I play it as a moon manikin. Tokepi was brought to the moon. Tokepi is always flying back and for the moon and the land of milk and honey, because his parents live on the moon. And he also goes to school on the moon. There is also moon-general knowledge as a subject. I'd love to have that so that I wouldn't have to dream of the land of milk and honey during the boring school lessons."
Media traces in this
description point out explicitly to Pokémon and Patricia's
favourite book: "The 35th of May" by Erich Kästner. On
their strange journey to the South Seas both heroes (Konrad and his
uncle Ringelhuth) pass by 'the land of milk and honey' (second
chapter), in which being lazy is promoted as a life style. Patricia's
make-believe world is named after this land. In the original story
there are lots of comfortable beds, in which Patricia places the
Pokémon Snorlax, who loves to sleep as much as she does. To
sleep and "hang out in bed" is Patricia's favourite
activity, not being considered appropriate for a 9-year-old
otherwise. In her make-believe world she finds a way to positively
value this characteristic.
The partial story about Tokepi,
travelling between two worlds, can be understood in looking at
Patricia's own biography. Patricia's father is a military officer and
the family had to move house every other year. Nine months prior to
the investigation the family moved from California to Munich, where
the girl was struggling in particular at school. Similar to Tokepi
she has been repeatedly brought into new and different worlds. With
this story (being more complex in the original version) she "works
up" her experiences in her make-believe world and finds a way to
turn it into something active. She even has a reason for her failure
at her studies at school and her lack of interest in educational
contents: normally, like Tokepi who lives in two worlds, she would
also have to go to a special school and learn other things.
The
character Mew, who is her most favourite Pokémon, has a
special significance for Patricia. According to Patricia although it
looks cute, it has the ability to explode half of the earth. For
Patricia Mew is an orientation point in her behaviour towards her
classmates, with whom she has been experiencing great difficulties at
the time of the study. When she is attacked by them she doesn't fight
back, but becomes "very quiet". She also "ignores"
the negative comments made by her Bavarian teacher (according to her
as well as to her mother), without justifying herself on one hand or
changing her behaviour on the other hand. This behaviour is very
similar to that of Mew in the Pokémon movie, which Patricia
watched with fascination. Mew is attacked, but the psycho-lightning
does not hurt him. He could lash back (which he eventually does in
the movie) but he is aware of his superiority and power. Mew, we
suggest, is an inner powerful image to which she clings during hard
times with her conviction: "I am more powerful than I seem to
be!"
Gender-specific
tendencies exist in all four countries, and are usually immediately
apparent. The girls' fantasies tend to place an emphasis on harmony
and they frequently fill the entire picture with a landscape. Traces
of media are less evident in the girls' make-believe worlds. The
boys' pictures are often saturated with unequivocal references to
current media contents, and many pictures portray a conflict
situation. With very few exceptions girls do not draw male figures
and boys do not draw female figures. In accordance with
gender-specific socialization processes girls stress harmony and
their orientation towards the centrality of relationships in their
lives. They are responsible and organize their world for lasting
permanent structures. The fantasies of most boys, on the other hand,
tend to be episodic with the emphasis on action. They seek and enjoy
clashes, repel danger and fight for a good cause. They seem to do
everything to avoid harmony. The worlds of the girls and the boys
seem to be completely distinct.
However, what seems at first
sight to be two completely different worlds is revealed in a detailed
analysis to have, in fact, quite similar characteristics. Danger, so
it seems, is present in both genders' worlds. In the boys' case, the
confrontation or the dangerous being is usually immediately present
in the drawing and story. With the girls' drawing, however, this is
not the case at first glance, but is often revealed under closer
secondary analysis of their stories. Isabel (case 52, Germany)
alludes to evil people and to criminals turned back by spies at the
border. Tessina (case 3, Germany) introduces a clear arrangement for
protecting her animals who are endangered by human beings: during the
day people may visit the island, but the night belongs solely to the
animals.
Whereas boys often fight against the threat or danger
directly in the picture, girls organize them away and make them
disappear. Hence, both boys and girls find ways to confront threats
and dangers, but they do it in ways supported by their
gender-specific socialization. They perform gender by finding an
appropriate "girlish" or "boyish" way to handle
such issues within their peer group and especially for us as
researchers.
Traces of media, as mentioned above, are found more
frequently and clearly in boys make-believe worlds. Media characters
in particular are frequently present in boys' fantasies, while in the
girls' they are extremely rare. The incidence of fantasies without
clear traces of media is twice as high in the case of the girls. This
is not surprising giving what we know from gender-specific media
analyses according to which most heroes of the children's programming
are male, and they are presented in a much wider range of roles,
professions, and personalities. Television as well as computer games
seem to offer too little for girls' fantasies, particularly in terms
of the possibility for imagining themselves to be strong, powerful
and to be able to take independent action. Girls are accordingly
compelled to invest a lot more in processing, interpreting, and
making the media material meaningful and relevant to them. In their
make-believe worlds they prefer the potentially androgynous creatures
like the Pokémon figures (grammatically most of them are
neuter) or CatDog (half female cat, half male dog). Another strategy
they seem to employ is to simply omit the male heroes from the text
and to borrow media setting alone. Sometimes they invent their own
female make-believe figures that were not in the original text but
would have fitted in well. The boys' fantasies, on the other hand,
reveal traces especially of action-adventure films and computer
games, documentary programmes, as well as mythical stories where men
are the heroes. The clear traces of media in the boys' fantasies
suggest that boys search for images of masculinity they expect to
find mainly in the media. These choices are, however, often
extraordinarily conservative, contributing far too little to a
well-balanced identity formation of developing boys (Winter/Neubauer
2001).
The similarities existing across the borders of the four countries described above are also complemented by special features in each. Just as media traces evident in the make-believe worlds were understand in the context of familiarity with children's media environment, cultural traces can be reconstructed and interpreted against the backdrop of knowledge of the unique characteristics of the four cultures.
The German study
produced several traces that can be considered special. Animals, for
example, are evident in the children's fantasies in all the
countries, but particularly frequently in the case of the German
children. Over 70% of all make-believe world pictures in the German
sample feature animals, which play a significant role in the story.
They represent children's interests, they symbolize the feeling of
being threatened, they embody the wish for close relationships - for
showing and being shown love and affection - and for gaining
strength.
German kids experience one particular related moral
conflict, however, that is reflected in their fantasies: they are
divided between their love of animals and the consumption of meat. In
their fantasy world they find ways of coming to terms with this
conflict. They go about informing other people, or justify why they
eat meat but still love animals, and why they should be protected.
This is also an apt context for a theme that is significant in a
relatively large number of German children's make-believe worlds: the
protection of the environment. Boys and girls imagine how they can
create environments in which animals can live in peace. They want to
drive environment-friendly cars, disassociating themselves from other
(imagined) countries that have no environment-friendly industry.
Besides the effect of watching nature and environment television
programmes, it is in all likelihood mainly the primary-school
curriculum that contributes to this awareness and concern. Children
want to actively protect nature in their make-believe world, to avoid
waste and to behave in an environment-friendly way. These
make-believe world elements are clearly linked here to power and
competence fantasies. This connection is extremely gratifying;
offering support in the form of more symbolic material which is
socially desirable.
The girls in the German sample reveal an
additional conspicuous feature. A relatively large number of them
focus on the wish to "act independently and self-determinedly"
in their make-believe world. There is a regional difference in the
forms of expression of this wish: girls in the north of the Republic
frequently use horses as symbolic material for this desire to act,
girls from Bavaria in the south use queens or princesses as their
motif. The reason for this difference can be easily associated with
their regional environment - in the north part of the country, horses
are much more available and central to the culture; while in Bavaria,
castles and the myths surrounding them are far more central.
The
study in Israel was designed to take into account the diversity of
the population in Israeli society and the Jewish-Arab conflict, in
particular. A fifth of the sample consisted therefore of Arab Israeli
children, of both Muslim and Christian origin, while the rest
represented the Jewish majority of the country. We wanted to find out
more about the fantasies of children growing up in a fundamentally
divided society. In their everyday world they experience enduring,
violent clashes resulting in an escalation of hate and aggression
accompanied by the widespread feeling of despair and the loss of all
hope. Accordingly, we expected to find in the children's dream worlds
references to their concerns and attitudes towards this
situation.
However, contrary to our expectations the conflict did
not overshadow children's make-believe worlds and coping with it did
not serve as a dominant theme in their stories and wishes. Both
Jewish and Arab children did not explicitly wish for worlds where
there were no terrorist attacks, no suicide bombers, no military
occupation and no racism. All in all we found only a few references
to the political situation, and mostly in passing. Only one
9-year-old Jewish girl, Amanda, seemed pre-occupied with terrorist
attacks and made an explicit wish for a world without them. In her
utopian world she drew a bomb and crossed it out with a thick X
explaining: "I draw an X on it, so there are no wars and no
terrorist attacks." Later in the interview she described her
make-believe world in detail:
"There is no school and
there are no studies, and there is no need to work there because they
have everything, and there is no need for money (…) this is
why I draw it in a cloud, so it means it is imaginary, where I really
want to live, a place without terrorist attacks."
Similarly,
we were not faced with any stories in which children imagined
themselves as military heroes fighting against the enemy or defending
their own people. We found no Jewish, no Arab, and no general
nationalistic symbols in the fantasies. There were no national flags
or slogans, no religious symbols or cultural icons, and virtually no
mention of the collective - neither in a religious nor in a
nationalist context (the one exception being three Jewish boys'
wishes for a victory by an Israeli soccer team). The sole indication
that children are aware of the situation and are concerned came
indirectly. Several Jewish and Arab children said that they tried to
avoid reading newspapers or watching television news because they
were troubled by the contents. Presumably the children partly
suppress the political situation, inclining to create in their
fantasies a kind of counter world where the conflict and the threats
it poses on their well-being, identity, and morality are nonexistent.
As anticipated, we found in the study several differences between
Arab and Jewish children. Due to the low number of examples, however,
they should rather be seen as ideas and tendencies. The dream worlds
of the Jewish children revealed more traces of an individual
orientation: "for myself", "to be all by myself",
"to be independent", "to do only things I want",
"to have no parents telling me what to do", "nobody is
there who expects to discipline me". The Arab children, on the
other hand, seemed to be more geared to the collective: in their
dream worlds, they tended to be with other people, mainly with their
relatives or friends. One possible interpretation of this difference
can be associated with their collective cultural-social orientations.
On the whole, Jewish children currently raised in Israel are oriented
towards a Western-modernized
society, highly Americanized and characterized by the typical
processes of individualization, commercialization and privatization.
Arab-Israeli children, on the other hand, while being raised in the
same country, usually grow up amidst traditional social-institutions
much more resistant to change. The traditional society focuses
heavily on the extended family as well as responsibility for the Arab
minority collective, which has been systematically discriminated
against due to the complexity of the political situation in the
region.
One possible indication of the sense of alienation, in
which these Arab-Israeli children are raised, is their lack of
acknowledgement and identification with the State of Israel as an
entity. In their stories, these children referred to their village or
town, but never to the country or state, neither by naming it or
indirectly. While Jewish boys, for example, identified with Israeli
soccer teams and proudly wished for their victories - the Arab boys
chose to skip their country of citizenship and to identify with a
far-way team from Brazil, or to draw a flag of Switzerland.
The US-American part
of the study was carried out in Urbana, Illinois. This is a
medium-sized university town in the Midwest. The population is
primarily middle-class. Geographically, the landscape there is very
flat. There is no large body of water close by. The fantasy of the
coast/water was clearly noticeable - sand, sun, mermaids, dolphins,
etc. Mountains also figured in several of the fantasies.
Feature-length movies played a significant role in the US-American
fantasies more than in the other countries. Four children referred to
the movie Shrek, for example, which had just arrived in the cinemas
not long before the survey period. In the USA, movies play an
important role in the children's media environment. When a new movie
enters the cinemas, marketing campaigns aim at generating excitement
- with product spin-offs and promotional campaigns involving
fast-food chains and other child-oriented businesses. For example, it
is common practice for plastic figurines of movie personalities to be
given as bonuses in special children's meals. Via TV commercials the
kids are urged to collect these toys. In this way the figures can
become a ubiquitous part of children's culture even before the launch
of the movie. The theatre run is routinely followed up by the release
of a video, which can also be accompanied by a new advertising
campaign. Once children own a video, it is common practice to view it
many times. This cycle of promotions and advertising through
different media outlets over the course of time, with subsequent
repeated viewings, may explain the notably more important role of
movies in the fantasies of the American kids.
Another striking
point is the emphasis of personal strength and individuality in the
fantasies, evident in all countries, but clearer and more widespread
in the American pictures. The United States is a society that
attaches considerable value to those who are successful due to their
own motivation and action - and this is evident in several children's
fantasies. Being successful is an intrinsic part of American
children's fantasies. They interject themselves into situations where
they can take action in the world, instead of reacting to the world.
They are strong, they have everything under control and they call the
shots. This corresponds to the cultural norms and social values:
"Most western industrialized societies tend to place individual
above collective aims for various historical and cultural reasons.
Traces of autonomy and self-confident approaches in individuals are
those generally respected and directly encouraged by parents in these
societies." (De Loache and Gottlieb, 2000, p. 13). Autonomy and
self-confidence are encouraged more than solidarity with others or
self-denial. It is not only perfectly acceptable to be different
(within certain bounds); it is fine to rise above the crowd and to be
special. These values are evident in the fantasies of the American
kids, where their individuality and competence are spotlighted and
celebrated.
What is initially particularly striking about the Korean pictures is their special design. Many pictures are painted with a background colour, using intense, radiant colours. This certainly has something to do with the painting materials available, but is also deeply rooted in the culture. Korean children have to be trained at an early age in specific, precise painting and drawing techniques. The background, however, is to be sought even more deeply in traditional roots, still very much alive in modern Korea and which influence identity-formation and everyday culture. Towards the end of the 2nd century B.C. Confucianism crossed Korean borders to become life's leading philosophy there. The philosophical teachings deeply influenced the lives, thinking and behaviour of the Korean population, constituting the state doctrine in the Kingdom until the beginning of the 20th century (Yi, 1995, S. 64). To this very day Korean family structures and daily habits, education at home and at school in South Korea are anchored in the norms and values of Confucian ethics and their culture moulded by Confucianism (e.g. Glasenapp, 1957; Eberhart, 1971; Kim, S.H., 1986; Yun, 1995).
Adaptation to the world
Observation of order and conventions
Subordination of human society to the divine order
Inequality in the status of all human beings
Educability of all human beings
Necessity of renunciation of individual freedom in favour of social-emotional security
Loyalty between subject and authority
Reverence, respect, devotion in the parent-child relationship
Strict division of man's and woman's roles
Rank differences through respect and deference of young people for older people
Trust and esteem between friends
In Korean society,
academic education and elite universities enjoy high esteem. Scholars
generally occupy a socially privileged position, constituting the
civil service. Nowadays a rigorous system of selection based on
scholastic achievement is applied in education to cream off the best,
the elite, which is matched by the parents' efforts to provide their
children with a sound, promising school education. Private tuition in
addition to school tuition, with the corresponding financial burden
for the parents, almost goes without saying. The originally positive
Confucian heritage that everyone is educable and should enjoy
education was interpreted one-sidedly in the modern competitive
society, leading to enormous pressure on children and young people to
perform well at school. This is expressed in the fantasies which
contain explicit references to such pressure that the kids would like
to escape from. The girl Hyon'ah (case 5) would like to fly to the
USA, since she believes that kids in the USA and other countries do
not have to learn so much. The boy Seyong (case 18), a model pupil,
would like to live in a world where he can live without the pressure
to do well exerted by adults. School as an unpleasant factor, which
children quite emphatically would like to exclude from their dream
world, exists in other countries, as well. But in Korea it is
explicitly the pressure (not school as a whole) that the kids refer
to. While some wish to flee from the pressure to do well, others have
assimilated their responsibility to always produce good, neat work.
The girl Young'son (case 12) fantasizes even in her dream world a
clock that confirms she has produced the results demanded of her and
praises her - some kind of Alter Ego. Another characteristic in which
the cultural heritage of Confucianism is reflected is, for instance,
the high level of group consciousness, which results in the children
being very reserved about portraying themselves as something special
in their fantasies.
And yet it is not only the tradition of
Confucianism that reveals itself as a cultural speciality in the
kids' fantasies. In comparison to the other three countries
considerably more traces of media from computer games are apparent.
This can be probably explained by the enormous interest in multimedia
in Korea. Computers and multimedia equipment are absolutely normal
basic facilities in every classroom. In the children's upbringing the
special potential of multimedia is underscored; parents and educators
alike encourage the kids to use computers. The question as to whether
a generation of frequent users is being weaned that is not always
able to handle the fascination of computer games is ignored by
society. Particularly regarding the boys this trend provides food for
thought.
In this study we
offered children an opportunity for fantasizing and investigated the
extent to which media and cultural traces are evident in what they
imagined. One phenomenon becomes quite clear: children have a rich
make-believe world. They express it mostly with discernible traces of
the media, but partly without any.
Television, the primary medium
for kids' fantasies, can supply material for the make-believe world,
if television matches the children's themes, their world of
experience and their appropriation patterns without placing excessive
demands. This applies not only to specific genres and formats,
fiction or non-fiction. However, the media also supply patterns of
interpretation that are not always appropriate for the kids and their
situation in life and are not necessarily to their advantage. The
study revealed problem areas in regard to gender issues as well as
the perception of other peoples.
For example, there
was a case in Dresden where a girl fantasized taking knowledge and
merchandise from Germany to the "dummies" - meaning the
Africans. Certainly, such perceptions are mainly formed by the social
environment. The media traces, however, clearly refer to animal
documentaries where usually "ignorant Africans" kill or
harm animals unnecessarily. The "good and clever" whites
(in this case Germans) discover this and teach the "Africans"
how to do things properly. The girl adopts this interpretation
pattern, it is true: It gives her the opportunity and freedom to take
action. She becomes a German missionary.
This may indeed be
subjectively meaningful, but with the aid of the media she creates
stereotypes and perceptions that correspond to a (nationally formed)
hierarchization. It is therefore urgent that the media generally,
especially those for children, apply their clichés more
cautiously.
Another problematic
aspect is that television also opens up wishes in children's
make-believe worlds or can formulate a title to the fulfilment of
their wishes. Due to the close link between television and
advertizing and licensing markets especially in commercialized
television, the danger is that consumer wishes are confused with
freedom of choice, and that children are just seen as customers with
spending power.
Last but not least, it must be borne in mind that
television per se is easily accessible and a continuous occupation of
time for a large number of children. Singer and Singer (see for
example 1999) drew the conclusion from their research that continuous
television consumption of heavy users, as well as negative feedback
from the surrounding environment can also limit the ability to
fantasize. However, the possibility that television as an activity in
itself constitutes an intense experience has not been a focus of this
study yet. As a result of the constant exposure to this intensive
media experience, the mental freedom necessary for the development
and maintenance of the fantasies can be lost (Klemm, 1999). Media
literacy is required for such a process, including the plain ability
to switch the television off. In order to develop media-literate
children, it is necessary to invest in media-literate educators and
parents, not only in the context of appropriate television use.
Adults need more skills to comprehend the expression of children's
fantasies, in all of its forms, with or without traces of the media.
According to Singer it would certainly also assist children if adults
themselves were open to their own fantasies.
Television's
significant role for the make-believe worlds of children should not
be underestimated. It can be used to promote fantasy if children and
their parents are able to contend with its contents, viewing duration
and discussion of the television traces in a competent and literate
way and if producers are aware of their responsibility, do not
exploit children but take them and their diverse characteristics and
needs seriously, and join hands in supporting their healthy growth.
Maya
Götz, Dr. phil. is Head of the Internationales
Zentralinstitut für das Jugend- und Bildungsfernsehen (IZI),
Munich, Germany.
Dafna Lemish, Ph.D. is
Professor and Chair of the Department of Communication at Tel Aviv
University, Israel.
Amy Aidman, Ph.D. is Lecturer at the
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, IL, USA.
Hyesung
Moon, Ph.D. lectures at the Department of Education of Yonsei
University in Seoul, South Korea.
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The evaluation of the child's drawing was based on Norbert Neuss' approach (1999). The child's individual statements made during the interview - the subjective meaning perspective having been understood - were used to formulate a story that adhered as closely as possible to the child's original quotes, emphasizing what was particularly important for him or her.
The German-language term "Handlungswünsche" (desires to act) is closely related to that customarily used in German-language media science research "handlungsleitende Themen" (themes of relevance for children's development) (Bachmair 1982, Charlton/Neumann-Braun 1986, also Theunert 1995, Neuss 1999 etc..) Unfortunately, there is currently no broadly based systematics of the term and analysis levels. This explains why we opted for a smaller, descriptive evaluation perspective and term, close to the empirical material.
We would like to thank Ruth Etienne Klemm Ph.D., a child psychologist and expert for children's fantasies, for the help with the reconstruction of this case.
The study took place only a few months after the second uprising in the Palestinian occupied territories, and before the complete escalation of the current crisis.
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