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Toddlers’ digital media practices and everyday parental struggles: Interactions and meaning-making as digital media are domesticated

Toddlers’ digital media practices and everyday parental struggles: Interactions and... AbstractIn this article, the Swedish findings from a European comparative study on 0–3-year-old children and their digital lives are presented and discussed in relation to domestication theory, including the concept of moral economy. More specifically, attention is paid to toddler's appropriation of digital technology and the parents’ moral struggles: the negotiations between the parents concerning the introduction of digital media practices in early childhood, the selection of content, and the monitoring of children. Parents of very young children have ambivalent feelings towards digital media technologies and struggle to make the right decision for their children. The study demonstrates that the domestication of digital technology in early childhood is far more multifaceted and troublesome for parents to handle than previous research has found. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Nordicom Review de Gruyter

Toddlers’ digital media practices and everyday parental struggles: Interactions and meaning-making as digital media are domesticated

Nordicom Review , Volume 42 (s4): 20 – Sep 1, 2021

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Publisher
de Gruyter
Copyright
© 2021 Helena Sandberg et al., published by Sciendo
ISSN
2001-5119
eISSN
2001-5119
DOI
10.2478/nor-2021-0041
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractIn this article, the Swedish findings from a European comparative study on 0–3-year-old children and their digital lives are presented and discussed in relation to domestication theory, including the concept of moral economy. More specifically, attention is paid to toddler's appropriation of digital technology and the parents’ moral struggles: the negotiations between the parents concerning the introduction of digital media practices in early childhood, the selection of content, and the monitoring of children. Parents of very young children have ambivalent feelings towards digital media technologies and struggle to make the right decision for their children. The study demonstrates that the domestication of digital technology in early childhood is far more multifaceted and troublesome for parents to handle than previous research has found.

Journal

Nordicom Reviewde Gruyter

Published: Sep 1, 2021

Keywords: 0–3-year-old children; digital media practices; domestication theory; moral economy; “day in the life” methodology

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