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Baby, it`s you : international capital discovers the under threes

journal contribution
posted on 2005-03-01, 00:00 authored by Patrick Hughes
Well-established international entertainment firms such as Disney and Fisher-Price are joining new start-up firms such as Baby Einstein to create a 'Baby' market of products (including toys, games and videos) specifically targeted at children aged 0-3 years. Despite its novelty, the 'Baby' market mirrors older markets that these firms have created around other demographic groups (e.g. older children, adolescents and adults) - it redefines its target demographic group around specific commodities and promotes its redefinition as 'common sense'. The 'Baby' firms redefine babies solely as early learners whose potential to learn can be released by these firms' brand-name 'educational' or 'developmental' products. Many adults buy these products because they accept the firms' redefinition of babies, but other adults ignore the firms' promotional messages and buy the products to give themselves some time apart from their babies. The 'Baby' market is significant for children and adults because it changes young children's relationships with adults and because it subordinates local cultural differences to a children's culture that purports to be 'global' but has, in reality, extremely narrow foundations in class, race and gender.

History

Journal

Contemporary issues in early childhood

Volume

6

Issue

1

Pagination

30 - 40

Publisher

Symposium Journals

Location

Oxford, England

ISSN

1463-9491

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Symposium Journals

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