04972nam 2200673Ia 450 991078009900332120230807221817.01-134-96456-01-138-13816-91-280-04600-70-203-40894-2(CKB)111056485511990(EBL)166598(OCoLC)124066983(SSID)ssj0000126373(PQKBManifestationID)11143040(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000126373(PQKBWorkID)10046958(PQKB)10363821(MiAaPQ)EBC166598(Au-PeEL)EBL166598(CaPaEBR)ebr10061097(CaONFJC)MIL4600(EXLCZ)9911105648551199019841210d1985 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierComparative youth culture the sociology of youth cultures and youth subcultures in America, Britain, and Canada /Michael BrakeLondon ;Boston :Routledge & K. Paul,1985.1 online resource (x, 228 pages)0-203-32205-3 0-415-05108-8 Includes bibliography and index.Cover; Comparative youth culture; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Preface; 1 The use of subculture as an analytical tool in sociology; Subcultural analysis and sociology; Culture, class and ideology; Subcultures and style; Subcultures, social reality and identity; The development of an analytical framework for the study of subcultures; Youth becomes a social problem-the development of subcultures as a concept in delinquency, and the rise of youth culture; 1 Respectable youth; 2 Delinquent youth; 3 Cultural rebels; 4 Politically militant youth; Conclusion2 Street-wise. The delinquent subculture in sociological theory in the United States; The Chicago school and the social ecology of the city; Criticisms of the social ecology model. The problems of pluralism-class, conflict and power; Youth culture and class; The statistical presence of delinquency in the working-class neighbourhood; Differential identity in the deprived neighbourhood; Anomie theory and its influence on subcultural studies; The influence of American naturalism. Matza and the drift into and from delinquency; Conclusion3 Just another brick in the wall. British studies of working-class youth cultures; The social ecology of the British working class neighbourhood; Education: anti-school culture and leisure; Societal reaction and labelling: moral panics, folk heroes and folk devils; Contemporary British ethnographic studies; The new wave of British subcultural theory; No future-a brief history of British working-class subcultures and their styles; Teddy boys-'gonna rock it up-gonna rip it up'; Mods-'the kids are all right'; Rockers-'leader of the pack'; Skinheads-'violence on the terraces'; Glamrock and glitterPunks-'white riot'The 'youth riots' of 1981; 4 The trippers and the trashers-bohemian and radical traditions of youth; The cultural rebels-bohemian and middle-class delinquency; The emergence of youth counterculture in the United States; The beat generation; Hippies, freaks and heads-the counterculture; The structure of the counterculture; Religious imperialism-the rise of the cults; The radical tradition-political militancy and protest movements; 5 Hustling, breaking and rapping-black and brown youth; Black people, culture and the economy; In the ghetto-formal and informal economiesBlack on blues-black culture and youth'Los vatos locos'-Hispanic youth culture in the barrio; 'Inglan is a bitch'-black and brown youth in Britain; 'Dread in Babylon'. Rude boys and Rastafarians-Afro-Caribbean youth culture in Britain; Asian youth in Britain; Black and brown girls; 'Let the power fall'-racism and its effect on youth; 6 'Take off eh!'-Youth culture in Canada; 7 The invisible girl-the culture of femininity versus masculinism; Love and marriage-escape into romance; Girls and delinquency; Girls in male-dominated subcultures; Punk women; The celebration of masculinism; No future? Subcultures, manufactured cultures and the economyMike Brake suggests that subcultures develop in response to social problems which a group experiences collectively, and shows how individuals draw on collective identities to define themselves.YouthUnited StatesYouthGreat BritainYouthCanadaSubcultureYouthYouthYouthSubculture.305.2/35Brake Mike147767MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910780099003321Comparative youth culture3810551UNINA