107: The impact of consumerism on children

Published: March 9, 2020, 1 a.m.

b'A few weeks ago we talked with Dr. Brad Klontz about the \'money scripts\' that we pass on to our children - perhaps unintentionally - if we fail to examine these and make conscious decisions about the messages we want to convey about money to our children.\\n\\nToday we continue our series on the intersection of parenting and money with a conversation with Dr. Allison Pugh, whose doctoral dissertation (and subsequent book, Longing and Belonging: Parents, Children, and Consumer Culture) remain seminal works in this field even a decade after their publication.\\n\\nIn this interview, we take the position that advertising to children is happening - so what do we do with that?\\xa0 How do children make meaning out of the messages sent to them through our consumerist culture?\\xa0 How do parents attempt to resist the effects of this culture, and how successful are they?\\n\\nIn our next episode in this series we\'ll dig more deeply into the effects of advertising itself on children\'s brains, so stay tuned for that!\\n\\n \\n\\nBook mentioned in the episode\\n

Longing and Belonging: Parents, Children, and Consumer Culture (Affiliate link).

\\n \\n\\nOther episodes on this series\\n\\nThis episode is the second in a series on the intersection of parenting and money. You can find other episodes in this series:\\n\\n038: The Opposite of Spoiled\\n\\n105: How to pass on mental wealth to your child\\n\\n112: How to Set up a Play Room\\n\\n115: Reducing the Impact of Advertising to Children\\n\\n118: Are You Raising Materialistic Kids?\\n\\n \\n\\n[accordion]\\n\\n[accordion-item title="Click here to read the full transcript"]\\n\\nJen\\xa0 01:31\\n\\nHello and welcome to the Your Parenting Mojo podcast. Today\'s episode is part of a series that I\'m doing on the Intersection of Childhood and Money. A while back now I interviewed New York Times columnist Ron Lieber, on his book The Opposite of Spoiled and we do use his approach to several topics related to money. But it seemed to me for a while now that there\'s a lot more to say on this. So more recently, I interviewed Dr. Brad Klontz on his concept of Money Scripts, which are the ideas about money that were passed on to us by our parents and that we will probably pass on to our children as well if we don\'t critically examine these and potentially make a conscious decision to choose a different path. Another avenue I\'ve been wanting to explore is consumerism since I come from England, which is certainly becoming more Americanized than many other places, but where consumerism still doesn\'t have the same force that it does here in the US where buying things to express love or because you\'re feeling sad or just because you feel like it is pretty much considered a birthright. And I spent a lot of time looking for someone to talk with on this topic and finally found our guest today Dr. Allison Pugh. Dr. Pugh is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Virginia whose teaching and research focuses on contemporary work and relationships, and particularly the intertwining of culture, emotions, intimacy and economic life. She\'s currently a fellow at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles while she writes a book about her research on the automation of work that\'s historically relied on relationships between people like the caring professions. She wrote the book'