“Overgrown Children” and Where to Find Them: Film Portrayals of Coresiding and Residentially Independent Siblings’ Developmental Maturity

IF 2.6 3区 心理学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES Emerging Adulthood Pub Date : 2024-04-04 DOI:10.1177/21676968241245741
Jan M. Gelech, Jordan Wellsch, Brenan Smith, Kathrina Mazurik, Paris Holt
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Abstract

Though young adult coresidence (in which individuals aged 18–35 reside within the family home) is stigmatized in mass media, research has not explored how such depictions relate to understandings of development. We used qualitative content analysis to explore how contemporary Canadian and American films depicted coresiding young adults and their similarly aged, residentially independent siblings with respect to various markers of adulthood. We found that coresiding characters were largely portrayed as developmentally immature both socially (e.g., full-time work) and characterologically (e.g., relational competence). In contrast, residentially independent siblings were overwhelmingly cast as developmentally on time. We argue that these depictions and contrasts reinforce a stigmatized coresider trope, framing the traits and actions of coresiders in terms of atypical development and attributing this living arrangement to individual faults. Implications for social attitudes and the wellbeing of emerging adults are discussed.
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"长不大的孩子 "和去哪里找他们?电影对同住和独立兄妹成长成熟的描述
尽管大众传媒对年轻人同住(即 18-35 岁的人住在家里)进行了污名化,但研究并没有探讨这种描述与对发展的理解之间的关系。我们使用定性内容分析法探讨了当代加拿大和美国电影是如何描述同住的年轻人及其年龄相仿、居住独立的兄弟姐妹的各种成年标志的。我们发现,在社会(如全职工作)和性格(如人际关系能力)方面,同住的角色大多被描绘成发育不成熟。与此相反,独立居住的兄弟姐妹则绝大多数被描绘成按时发育的。我们认为,这些描述和对比强化了 "核心同住者 "的污名化特质,将核心同住者的特征和行为定格为非典型发展,并将这种生活安排归咎于个人过失。本文讨论了这一现象对社会态度和新成人福祉的影响。
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来源期刊
Emerging Adulthood
Emerging Adulthood Multiple-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
19.20%
发文量
87
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