Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

Children's Imaginative Play : A Visit to Wonderland, Hardback Book

Children's Imaginative Play : A Visit to Wonderland Hardback

Part of the Child Psychology and Mental Health series

Hardback

Description

In this visit to the wonderland of children's imaginative, make-believe play, readers are be exposed to both a general, bird's-eye view of the whole of this fascinating realm, and to a closer look at its diverse regions.

This volume examines the borderlines between make-believe play and akin phenomena such as dreams, drama, and rituals.

Readers will become acquainted with the secret codes of make-believe play.

These codes are activated in both covert and overt power struggles among children as well as in the child's internal theater of emotions.

Readers will have the opportunity to examine these uses by looking at real-life sociodramatic play scenes.

Also, the development of make-believe play and its interface with the child's general cognitive and socioemotional development is traced.

This volume enables readers to consider children of various cultures at play, and investigates whether make-believe play and its characteristics are universal or culture-specific. Make-believe play has been investigated across fields including cognitive, clinical, developmental, and social psychology, as well as linguistics, anthropology, and sociology.

In this book, a comprehensive, integrative model is proposed, in which all of these approaches are synthesized into a single, coherent whole.

The unifying hypothesis behind this synthesis is that make-believe play is a semiotic system, a body of signs and symbols, a language by means of which children express themselves and communicate.

This language enables children to regulate and balance both their inner emotional life and their social life.

Another central hypothesis is therefore that make-believe play functions as an homeostatic feedback mechanism for controlling the level of arousal around the child's central concerns, as well as the level of interpersonal conflict around issues of social proximity and power.

Therapeutic and education applications of make-believe play are derived from these hypotheses and their ramifications.

Information

£74.00

 
Free Home Delivery

on all orders

 
Pick up orders

from local bookshops

Information

Also in the Child Psychology and Mental Health series  |  View all