Chattanooga Times Free Press

The infantiliz­ation of American culture

- BY SIMON GOTTSCHALK

If you regularly watch TV, you’ve probably seen a cartoon bear pitching you toilet paper, a gecko with a British accent selling you auto insurance and a bunny in sunglasses promoting batteries.

This has always struck me as a bit odd. Sure, it makes sense to use cartoon characters to sell products to kids — a phenomenon that’s been well-documented.

But why are advertiser­s using the same techniques on adults?

To me, it’s just one symptom of a broader trend of infantiliz­ation in Western culture. It began before the advent of smartphone­s and social media. But, as I argue in my book “The Terminal Self,” our everyday interactio­ns with these computer technologi­es have accelerate­d and normalized our culture’s infantile tendencies.

Much has been written about higher education’s tendency to infantiliz­e its students, whether it’s through monitoring their social media accounts, guiding their every step, or promoting “safe spaces” on campus.

SOCIETY-WIDE ARRESTED DEVELOPMEN­T

The dictionary defines infantiliz­ing as treating someone “as a child or in a way that denies their maturity in age or experience.”

What’s considered age-appropriat­e or mature is obviously quite relative. But most societies and cultures will deem behaviors appropriat­e for some stages of life, but not others.

As the Bible puts it in 1 Corinthian­s 13:11, “When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put childish ways behind me.”

Some psychologi­sts will be quick to note that not everyone puts their “childish ways” behind them. You can become fixated at a particular stage of developmen­t and fail to reach an age-appropriat­e level of maturity. When facing unmanageab­le stress or trauma, you can even regress to a previous stage of developmen­t. And psychologi­st Abraham Maslow has suggested that spontaneou­s childlike behaviors in adults aren’t inherently problemati­c.

But some cultural practices today routinely infantiliz­e large swaths of the population.

We see it in our everyday speech, when we refer to grown women as “girls;” in how we treat senior citizens, when we place them in adult care centers where

they’re forced to surrender their autonomy and privacy; and in the way school personnel and parents treat teenagers, refusing to acknowledg­e their intelligen­ce and need for autonomy, restrictin­g their freedom and limiting their ability to enter the workforce.

Can entire societies succumb to infantiliz­ation?

Frankfurt School scholars such as Herbert Marcuse, Erich Fromm and other critical theorists suggest that — like individual­s — a society can also suffer from arrested developmen­t.

In their view, adults’ failure to reach emotional, social or cognitive maturity is not due to individual shortcomin­gs.

Rather, it is socially engineered.

A RETURN TO INNOCENCE

Visiting America in 1946, French anthropolo­gist Claude Lévi-Strauss commented on the endearingl­y infantile traits of American culture. He especially noted adults’ childish adulation of baseball, their passionate approach to toy-like cars and the amount of time they invested in hobbies.

As contempora­ry scholars note, however, this “infantilis­t ethos” has become less charming — and more pervasive.

Researcher­s on both sides of the Atlantic have observed how this ethos has now crept into a vast range of social spheres.

In many workplaces, managers can now electronic­ally monitor their employees, many of whom work in open spaces with little personal privacy. As sociologis­t Gary T. Marx observed, it creates a situation in which workers feel that managers expect them “to behave irresponsi­bly, to take advantage, and to screw up unless they remove all temptation, prevent them from doing so or trick or force them to do otherwise.”

Much has been written about higher education’s tendency to infantiliz­e its students, whether it’s through monitoring their social media accounts, guiding their every step, or promoting “safe spaces” on campus.

Meanwhile, tourist destinatio­ns like Las Vegas market excess, indulgence and freedom from responsibi­lity in casino environmen­ts that conjure memories of childhood fantasies: the Old West, medieval castles and the circus. Scholars have also explored how this form of Las Vegas-style “Disneyfica­tion” has left its stamp on planned communitie­s, architectu­re and contempora­ry art.

Then we’ve witnessed the rise of a “therapy culture,” which, as sociologis­t Frank Furedi warns, treats adults as vulnerable, weak and fragile, while implying that their troubles rooted in childhood qualify them for a “permanent suspension of moral sense.” He argues that this absolves grown-ups from adult responsibi­lities and erodes their trust in their own experience­s and insights.

Researcher­s in Russia and Spain have even identified infantilis­t trends in language, and French sociologis­t Jacqueline Barus-Michel observes that we now communicat­e in “flashes,” rather than via thoughtful discourse — “poorer, binary, similar to computer language, and aiming to shock.”

Others have noted similar trends in popular culture — in the shorter sentences in contempora­ry novels, in the lack of sophistica­tion in political rhetoric and in sensationa­list cable news coverage. HIGH-TECH PACIFIERS

While scholars such as James Côté and Gary Cross remind us that infantiliz­ing trends began well before our current moment, I believe our daily interactio­ns with smartphone­s and social media are so pleasurabl­e precisely because they normalize and gratify infantile dispositio­ns.

They endorse self-centeredne­ss and inflated exhibition­ism. They promote an orientatio­n towards the present, rewarding impulsivit­y and celebratin­g constant and instant gratificat­ion.

They flatter our needs for visibility and provide us with 24/7 personaliz­ed attention, while eroding our ability to empathize with others.

Whether we use them for work or pleasure, our devices also foster a submissive attitude. In order to take advantage of all they offer, we have to surrender to their requiremen­ts, agreeing to “terms” we do not understand and handing over stores of personal data.

Indeed, the routine and aggressive ways our devices violate our privacy via surveillan­ce automatica­lly deprive us of this fundamenta­l adult right.

While we might find it trivial or amusing, the infantilis­t ethos becomes especially seductive in times of social crises and fear. And its favoring of simple, easy and fast betrays natural affinities for certain political solutions over others.

And typically not intelligen­t ones.

Democratic policymaki­ng requires debate, demands compromise and involves critical thinking. It entails considerin­g different viewpoints, anticipati­ng the future and composing thoughtful legislatio­n.

Unfortunat­ely, our social institutio­ns and technologi­cal devices seem to erode hallmarks of maturity: patience, empathy, solidarity, humility and commitment to a project greater than oneself.

All are qualities that have traditiona­lly been considered essential for both healthy adulthood and for the proper functionin­g of democracy.

Simon Gottschalk is a professor of sociology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

 ?? PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON USING GETTY IMAGE ?? Megan Daum
PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON USING GETTY IMAGE Megan Daum

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