Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Youth, Crime and Media MEP208 2. Emergence of Youth: Teenage Consumer to Counterculture.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Youth, Crime and Media MEP208 2. Emergence of Youth: Teenage Consumer to Counterculture."— Presentation transcript:

1 Youth, Crime and Media MEP208 2. Emergence of Youth: Teenage Consumer to Counterculture

2 Chicago School ethnographies: youth and ‘slum societies’ Studies of immigrant communities during the Depression (Whyte 1943; Cressey 1932) “The younger generation has built up its own society relatively independently of the influence of its elders” (Whyte 1943: p.xviii) Corner boys (unemployed, uneducated) v. College boys (upwardly mobile) Racketeering and political activities

3 The first teenagers Turn of 20thC – young people enjoy better standard of living, more leisure time and economic independence Moral panics about delinquency – 1930s statistics show increase in juvenile crime Fewer marriages in Manchester during 1930s than 50s or 60s (Fowler 1992) Public dancing and cinema going - first examples of mass teenage consumption

4 Case study: Ballroom dancing Standardisation of dance steps (waltz, foxtrot, quickstep, tango) – strict tempo Late 1930s: US craze for swing and jitterbug (jiving) threatens the conservatism of standardised couple- dance styles Jitterbug and rumba are controversial: new styles flout social / sexual etiquette Seeds of rock ‘n’ roll era are sown

5 WW2 – and after the war Wartime – closure of schools + youth clubs, high wages, black-outs blamed for high delinquency rates (Baney 1987) 1948 – National Service Act 1955 – sharp increase in juvenile offences National survey - youth enjoying greater autonomy + affluence (Abrams 1959) 1960s – end of NS, liberal social policies

6 Youth as a generational unit Disaffected, delinquent youth – initially linked to family and social class issues Early models of ‘maladjusted’ youth centre on specific urban, working class communities (e.g. Mays 1954) Post-1955 youth re-categorised as a distinctive generation – the ‘generation gap’, ‘youth culture’, ‘baby boomers’

7 Countercultures Emerge in the 1960s as generational categories (i.e. all young people of a certain social and political bent) Hippies – middle class, bohemian, politically motivated youth (Melly 1972) Moral campaigns intended to check the ‘permissive revolution’ (Newburn 1991) Countercultures fracture into subcultures


Download ppt "Youth, Crime and Media MEP208 2. Emergence of Youth: Teenage Consumer to Counterculture."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google