TITLE:
Sociology of Nonverbal Expressions through Doodles
AUTHORS:
Annie Malcolm, Seungheon Oh
KEYWORDS:
Adolescents, Creativity, Doodling, Emotional well-being, Identity, Self-Expression
JOURNAL NAME:
Sociology Mind,
Vol.16 No.1,
January
22,
2026
ABSTRACT: Doodling, a spontaneous mark or drawing created without the intention of producing a finished artwork, operates at the intersection of psychology, sociology, and art, offering adolescents a quiet yet powerful medium of self-expression. Through a review of existing scholarship and interviews with four high school students, this study explores how doodling functions as a nonverbal language of identity and emotion. Prior research highlights the role of doodling in stress reduction, emotional externalization, and subtle acts of agency in contexts such as bullying or burnout. Building these insights, my findings reveal that adolescents serve doodling as a tool for processing emotions and shaping personal narratives. Professional examples from artists such as Andie Dinkin, Claire Barrow, and Jean-Michel Basquiat also demonstrate how doodling moves fluidly between raw creativity and polished art, emphasizing its duality as both process and product. These perspectives suggest that doodling deserves greater recognition in educational and counseling contexts, where it can be embraced as an accessible form of emotional expression, identity of formation, and creative exploration for adolescents.