@article{article_1704491, title={The Symbolic Child: A Cultural Sociological Analysis of the Changing Role of the Child in the Family}, journal={Afyon Kocatepe Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi}, volume={27}, pages={103–120}, year={2025}, DOI={10.32709/akusosbil.1704491}, author={Özkan, Vildane}, keywords={Değişen çocukluk, aile, simgesel çocuk, tarım toplumları, dijital çağ}, abstract={Drawing on the realization that classical family sociology often treats children as passive dependents—rendering them analytically invisible—this study examines the transformation of the concept of the “symbolic child,” a culturally constructed image of the child’s role and meaning in family life, from agrarian societies to the digital age. This research aims to re-center the symbolic child as a key analytical figure in family sociology and considers how historical and cultural shifts in the symbolic meaning of childhood have redefined the role and meaning of the family institution. The analysis acknowledges that conceptions of childhood are not monolithic; it notes variations by gender, class, and historical-cultural context, bringing an intersectional nuance to the findings. Methodologically, using a qualitative, interpretive, and historical-comparative analysis grounded in cultural sociology, the study traces and compares changes in the symbolic status of children across successive periods. The key findings reveal a profound transformation in the role of children: from economic agencies and labor contributors in agrarian households, children became emotional focal points in industrial-era families, and in today’s media-saturated society they have become precociously adultified participants. Overall, the findings suggest that to understand the family as a cultural institution, the evolving symbolic child must be placed at the center of sociological analysis.}, number={Aile Özel Sayısı}, publisher={Afyon Kocatepe Üniversitesi}