Infantilization

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Infantilization is the prolonged treatment of one who is not a child, as though they are a child.[1] Studies have shown that an individual, when infantilized, is overwhelmingly likely to feel disrespected. Such individuals may report a sense of transgression akin to dehumanization.

Racism

Infantilization is an important concept that was pivotal to maintaining slavery - children of enslaved women would also be enslaved because both belonged to the master. Africans were considered ‘child races’, resulting in subsequent infantilization.[2] When black men respond negatively to “boy,” this is caused by infantilization. Infantilization plays a role in implicit bias, which is a modern effect caused by subjugation, primarily economically, by failing to honor the work and creativity of subjugated populations. Infantilization can be used by propaganda to remove factual contributions from subjugated communities. This is done by individuals who would rather believe something that fits within their belief system than truly hear information as it comes. [3]

Ableism

Disabled individuals can be infantilized in their interactions with able-bodied people. That can occur alongside other

neurotypical parents of autistic children and most charities dedicated to autism focused on children. The extreme focus on children essentially denies the existence of autistic adults within public consciousness, leading to many people unknowingly discriminating against autistic adults.[5]

Ageism

Older adults

Infantilization can happen to older adults which leads to denying them autonomy in their care, such as through being excessively controlled or being addressed with baby talk, as if they were a child incapable of understanding complex topics. This leads to a reduced quality of care. From a patient's perspective, this is seen as disrespectful and patronizing. Infantilization can also occur as an aspect of intimate partner violence, as some abusive partners substitute physical violence for psychological abuse to maintain their power.[6]

Youth

When used in reference to teenagers or

adolescents, the term typically suggests that teenagers and their potential are underestimated in modern society. It can also be used to describe adolescents being regarded as though they are younger than their actual age.[7] Infantilization may also refer to a process when a child is being treated in a manner appropriate only for younger children.[8] Robert Epstein is a notable critic of the treatment of youth and adolescents, suggesting that many public policymakers and neuroscientists utilize myths about the teenage brain in order to disenfranchise and ultimately infantilize them.[9]

Property law

In

undocumented workers in which the power imbalance allows employers to rob workers of their agency and avenues for redress;[11] the dispossession of property from African Americans in the South Carolina sea islands by predatory tax buyers, who routinely infantilized their victims by overwhelming them with paperwork and timelines to accelerate foreclosures;[12] and the unequal division of matrimonial property in southern Nigeria after divorce that assumes women are less capable of managing property and thus infantilizes them.[13]

Sexism

Adult women are frequently referred as girls, a term that is inherently infantilizing. [14] Infantilization is such a common feature of sexism that it is one of five dimensions of sexual harassment in a Gender Experiences Questionnaire.[15]

Humanitarian aid can infantilize women who are displaced from their homes by depicting them simply as innocent victims, not as capable individuals with agency. Women refugees may also be depicted as helpless and unwanted.[16]

Fictional female characters have been depicted as "overtly girly" and criticized as contributing to the infantilization of women.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ Maude, Ulrika (2011). Beckett and Phenomenology. p. 111. 'to infantilize someone', for instance by treating an adult person as if they were a child
  2. S2CID 148918401
    . Retrieved 20 October 2022.
  3. ^ Ware, Mark (2013). Handbook of Demonstrations and Activities in the Teaching of Psychology volume 2. p. 281.
  4. S2CID 197736429
    .
  5. .
  6. .
  7. ^ Couture, Pamela (2007). Child Poverty: Love, Justice, and Social Responsibility. p. 199.
  8. PMID 1049435
    . In Maternal Overprotection, Levy (1957) defines infantilization as that process occurring in childhood whereby certain activities in caring for the child are continued beyond the stage of development when such activities usually occur.
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  14. ^ Macarthur, Heather Jean (April 16, 2015). When Women are Called "girls": The Effect of Infantilizing Labels on Women's Self-perceptions (Master's). Pennsylvania State University.
  15. S2CID 145666798
    . Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  16. . Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  17. . Retrieved 10 September 2022.