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Subculture, style, chavs and consumer capitalism: Towards a critical cultural criminology of youthUniversity of Sydney, Australia, greg.martin{at}usyd.edu.au This article examines current controversies in youth culture studies and relates them to recent developments in cultural criminology. On the one hand, post-subcultural theorists argue the concept of subculture is redundant and obsolete and should be replaced by less bounded or rigid concepts, such as neo-tribe, which supposedly better capture the essence of identity formation and lifestyle choices in postmodern consumer culture. On the other hand, critics argue postmodern subcultural theory is an apology for consumerism and posit the continuing relevance of social class as an analytical category. In the last decade or so, and unbeknownst to those working in youth culture studies, cultural criminologists have attempted to adapt traditional subcultural theory to new experiences of transgression which now emerge in the transition to late modernity. Cultural criminology nevertheless has poststructural tendencies. By examining the chav phenomenon in Britain as well as research in youth transitions under consumer capitalism, this article argues that old theories and concepts, such as subculture, ought not be so readily disregarded and discarded, and that the notion of style remains applicable to some young people who are marginalized and disadvantaged. The article thus proposes a critical cultural criminology of youth.
Key Words: chav cultural criminology neo-tribe subculture youth culture
Crime, Media, Culture, Vol. 5, No. 2,
123-145 (2009) |
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