HOW CHILDREN PLACE THEMSELVES AND OTHERS IN LOCAL SPACE |
| |
Authors: | Danielle van der Burgt |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Social and Economic Geography, Uppsala University, P.O. Box 513, SE-751 20 Uppsala, Sweden E-mail: |
| |
Abstract: | This study examines the ways in which children aged 11 to 15 in six adjacent neighbourhoods in a medium-sized Swedish town place themselves and others in local space. Special attention is given to how they discuss a neighbourhood stigmatized in the public discourse and how children who live in this neighbourhood react to the negative representations of the place in which they live. The study is based on group interviews and maps. The study shows that children construct representations of their own neighbourhoods as "quiet" neighbourhoods and place objects of "trouble" and "danger" somewhere else. It is argued that this is done both in relation to their personal knowledge of the neighbourhood and in relation to local and/or media representations of their own and other neighbourhoods. It is shown that the children are influenced by media representations of a stigmatized neighbourhood, but also that they are not passive reproducers of these discourses and that some of them are able to offer counter-discourses. The children living in this neighbourhood experience difficulties in defending it as the quiet place which they perceive it to be to outsiders because of the negative discourses. |
| |
Keywords: | children neighbourhood identity local and media representations stigmatization Sweden |
|
|