The Role & Formation Of Youth Sub/culture Flashcards

1
Q

How do functionalists see the youth stage?

A
  • Transition stage
  • A time of independence
  • A way to let off steam and eventually conform.
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2
Q

What functionalists discuss youth?

A

Parsons, Abrams, and Eisenstadt

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3
Q

How does Parsons describe youth culture?

A
  • Saw it as an important transition stage at a potentially stressful time when an individual must learn to leave the security of the home and become independent.
  • This is often through part time jobs and spending more time away, giving them skills and independence.
  • It is a ‘rite of passage’ where youth become more independent and responsible.
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4
Q

How did Eisenstadt see youth culture?

A
  • It’s a way if bringing youths into society.
  • During the isolated phase there’s a risk of feeling stress and anomie.
  • Youth culture provides shared norms and values allowing a sense of belonging and a chance to ‘let off steam’ from tension and stress, find own opinions, and get any frustration ‘out of their system’.
  • Period of rebellion is seen as normal and essential.
  • A way of testing boundaries and reinforcing acceptable norms and values, thus contributing to social order.
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5
Q

Why does Eisenstadt believe youth culture is necessary?

A

It’s a way of testing boundaries and to eventually reinforce acceptable norms and values.

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6
Q

How did youth culture emerge according to Abrams?

A

Youth gaining job opportunities and so had more money in their pockets. They were thus targeted by businesses and the media.

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7
Q

How can functionalism be evaluated?

A
  • Generalised youth culture, ignoring the different subcultural differences.
  • Don’t consider social factors which differentiates experiences. (neo-marxists, feminists)
  • Most evidence came from white middle class men. Their analysis is ethnocentric.
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8
Q

What do Marxists/neo-Marxists look at?

A

Spectacular youth subcultures and their reaction to wider society.

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9
Q

What neo Marxist institution collected influential work on youth subcultures?

A

CCCS
Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies

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10
Q

What was the Neo-Marxist explanation for forming youth subcultures?

A
  • The economic situation faced by youth. There was high unemployment, inner city decay, racial tension and strikes.
  • The CCCS said how youth subculture formation was resistance against the ruling class.
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11
Q

How can you evaluate the Marxist/neo Marxist view?

A
  • They were looking at examples relating to class, so they interpreted them in that way. The fashion itself may have just be having fun.
  • Feminists: CCCS ignore girls.
  • Middle class also have subcultures but were largely ignored.
  • Many aren’t part of spectacular subcultures. They are researching a visible minority.
  • Postmodernism: outdated
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12
Q

What are the feminist sociologists that say the role of girls in subcultures has been ignored?

A

McRobbie and Garber

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13
Q

What did McRobbie and Garber find when looking at research?

A
  • When girls did appear, they were passive girlfriends or reinforcing stereotypes.
  • They were often commented by attractiveness
  • Researchers were mostly male so it was suggested they developed a rapport with men and felt unable to connect with the women.
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14
Q

What did McRobbie and Garber argue about girls?

A

They negotiate different spaces to those inhibited by boys. Their friend groups are often ‘close knit.’

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15
Q

How may feminism be criticised?

A

Postmodernists: gender is less significant as current subcultures have a lack of gender distinctions.

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16
Q

What do Postmodernists believe about youth subcultures?

A
  • They are increasingly fragmented and diverse.
  • They are fluid and take from different sources, crossing ethnic, gender and class divides.
17
Q

What Postmodernists discuss youth subcultures?

A

MIPS (Manchester Institute of Popular Culture)
Redhead
Maffesoli
Bennett
Polhemus

18
Q

What did MIPS find out about club culture?

A

There was no clear gender, ethnic or class distinctions.

19
Q

Who says club cultures are formed within and through the media?

A

Redhead

20
Q

Who talks about ‘neo tribes’?

A

Maffesoli

21
Q

What are Neo tribes?

A
  • Loose organised grouping with no fixed membership or commitment.
  • Young people flit from tribe to tribe dabbling different aspects then moving on.
  • The tribe is used to satisfy individual needs.
    Maffesoli
22
Q

What did Postmodernist Bennett find in their research in nightclubs?

A
  • They found neo tribes based on fashion, music and lifestyle but had no shared values.
  • Neo-tribalism recognises the shifting nature and fluidity of preferences to music and style.
  • For example, clubbing is multidimensional, involving diverse experiences.
23
Q

Who talks about ‘Supermarket of Style’?

A

Polhemus

24
Q

What is a ‘Supermarket of Style’?

A
  • Youths create identities by picking and mixing from various subcultures, fashions, lifestyles, and music.
    Commitment is uncommon and youth don’t like labels. E.g retro fashion
25
Q

How can postmodernism be evaluated?

A
  • There’s still distinct subcultures like goths, emos and chavs.
  • Unlikely most youths are part of neo tribes
  • Are the neo tribes artificial if they are media driven?
  • Some still divide the self on ethnic or gender lines.
  • Some show commitment to politics or the environment.
26
Q

What are the Neo-Marxists who are part of the CCCS who research spectacular subcultures?

A

Hall & Jefferson
Hebdige: Mods, Punks
Clarke: Skinheads
Cohen: Decline of working class industries
Jefferson: Teddy Boys