Original article:

“Rough and Tumble” Play: Lessons in Life

Evolutionary Psychology 4: 330-346 Pam Jarvis, Carnegie Faculty of Sports and Education, Carnegie Hall, Leeds Metropolitan University, Headingley Campus, Beckett Park, Leeds LS6 3QS, UK, Tel: (+44) 0113 283 2600 ext. 6542,, P.Jarvis@leedsmet.ac.uk

Abstract

This paper focuses upon the developmental role of Rough and Tumble (R&T) play with particular attention to the narratives that children use to underpin such activities, and to gender differences within these. The empirical research focused upon the R&T play of children in the early years department of a suburban primary school in Northern England. The children’s playtime activities were ethnographically observed over a period of eighteen calendar months, encompassing five school terms. The effects of evolution, biology and culture are recognized in the approach taken to the analysis of data. Findings indicated that the narratives underpinning R&T play were socially complex and highly gendered, and that mixed gender R&T play in particular could be theorized to mirror and simplify aspects of complex, gendered adult interaction.

Keywords

rough and tumble play, social development, evolution, culture, gender.

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Evolutionary Psychology - An open access peer-reviewed journal - ISSN 1474-7049 © Ian Pitchford and Robert M. Young; individual articles © the author(s)
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