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Social Development as Preference Management: How Infants, Children, and Parents Get What They Want from One Another

Social Development as Preference Management: How Infants, Children, and Parents Get What They Want from One Another

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Rachel Karniol
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 4/19/2010
EAN 9780521135306, ISBN10: 0521135303

Paperback, 388 pages, 27.7 x 21.3 x 2.5 cm
Language: English

Karniol engagingly presents social development in children through the language of preference management. Conversational excerpts garnered from around the world trace how parents talk about preferences, how infants' and children's emergent language conveys their preferences, how children themselves are impacted by others' preferences, and how they in turn influence the preferences of adults and peers. The language of preferences is used to crack into altruism, aggression, and morality, which are ways of coming to terms with other people's preferences. Behind the scenes is a cognitive engine that uses transformational thought – conducting temporal, imaginal, and mental transformations – to figure out other people's preferences and to find more sophisticated means of outmanoeuvring others by persuading them and playing with one's own mind and other people's minds when preferences are blocked. This book is a unique and sometimes amusing must-read for anyone interested in child development, language acquisition, socialisation, and communication.

Introduction
1. The baby 'preference game'
2. Children's expression of preferences
3. Emerging meta-preferences
4. Other people's preferences
5. Parenting and preference management
6. Channeling children's preferences
7. Temporizing preferences
8. Restricting children's preferences
9. Disciplining non-compliance
10. Planes of transformational thought
temporal, imaginal, mental
11. Manipulating others
12. Coping and self-regulating
13. Mind play
applying transformational thought
14. Minding one's own versus others' preferences
altruism, aggression and morality
15. Tying up.

“We are defined by our preferences. As Rachel Karniol points out in this fascinating new look at social development, when asked to describe ourselves, we list our preferences: we love the Red Sox, or playing Bach, or eating ice cream. But how do we arrive at those preferences, and how do we get what we want? How children and parents get what they want from one another involves a complex process of negotiation that begins in infancy, when mothers impute preferences to preverbal infants. As children acquire language, they are socialized to prefer things appropriate to their society and to manage their own preferences. They also have to learn to recognize and deal with the preferences of others. Karniol uses real language data to present an explanation and a theory of social development that has preference management at its core. This scholarly and readable book is filled with eye-opening ideas.”
– Jean Berko Gleason, Boston University


“Rachel Karniol makes a convincing case for her claim that an understanding of how children come to manage their preferences – how they learn to prioritize and express their wants and how they learn to juggle their wants with those of others – is necessary for an adequate appreciation of many central facets of social and cognitive development. Her book is an insightful, unique, and fresh perspective and will make excellent reading for academics and graduate students.”
– David G. Perry, Florida Atlantic University


“Portraying social development as preference management offers a new and important window into psychological growth. Karniol's theory weaves together themes of social communication, moral development, self-regulation, interpersonal understanding, and conceptual growth into a provocative new understanding of self and social development. Conversational excerpts gathered from children around the world are thoughtfully enlisted to highlight the role of language, and conversation, in the development of preference management. A remarkable, well-written and thought-provoking read of equal value to developmental scientists, practitioners, parents, and others interested in children.”
– Ross A. Thompson, University of California, Davis


"This is a wonderful, scholarly written, book that will inspire new ways of looking at social development and socialization processes. The emotionally laden management of intentions and desires is innovatively examined through the framework of preference development. In this context, the author shows brilliantly how intentions and desires are, early on, evaluated against the desires of others and the constraints of reality. She argues convincingly that the need to stand by preferences, or negotiate them in everyday social interaction, allows advances in communication and in language acquisition. The book is very well written and documented. It should be essential reading for students and researchers interested in social development, socialization processes, and the pragmatics of language acquisition, and in general for all those interested in what children have to say."
– Edy Veneziano, Université Paris Descartes