Style and Identity in Youth Cultures
ANTH 290
Fall 2018 not offered
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Crosslisting:
AMST 290 |
This course focuses on young people's engagements with commercially provided culture and their implications for identity formation. We begin in the postwar United States, when producers of symbolic goods, such as movies, music, and clothes, began aggressively tailoring products for young people; over the rest of the 20th century and into the 21st, new youth-oriented cultural commodities and sites of consumption have been used by young people in diverse ways to define themselves in relationships to adult society and to other young people. We will examine young people's intensifying involvement with the cultural market, with attention to both the diversity of youth-cultural formations that have emerged within the United States and to the global circulation of Euro-American youth culture. Using case studies, we will consider the ways in which young people's consumption practices have both reinforced and transgressed intersecting boundaries of class, race, gender, and nationality. An overarching concern in the course will be to assess whether or to what extent particular cultural practices may help prepare young people for positions of privilege, reconcile them to structural disadvantages, or provide them with resources to challenge the dominant society. |
Credit: 1 |
Gen Ed Area Dept:
SBS ANTH |
Course Format: Lecture / Discussion | Grading Mode: Graded |
Level: UGRD |
Prerequisites: None |
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Fulfills a Requirement for: (AMST)(ANTH)(EDST)(STS) |
Major Readings:
danah boyd, IT'S COMPLICATED: THE SOCIAL LIVES OF NETWORKED TEENS Ross Haenfler, SUBCULTURES: THE BASICS Elizabeth A. Armstrong & Laura T. Hamilton, PAYING FOR THE PARTY: HOW COLLEGE MAINTAINS INEQUALITY
Other authors we will read include, Mary Bucholtz, Paul Hodkinson, Angela McRobbie, Bill Osgerby, Grace Palladino, Sarah Thornton, Anoop Nayak, Joe Austin, Jennifer Tilton, Sunaina Maira, Amy Best, Amy Wilkins, and Oneka LaBenet
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Examinations and Assignments: 2 short (3-5 page) papers on assigned topics; final 8-10 page paper on student-selected topic |
Additional Requirements and/or Comments: Each student will participate in a group that leads a class discussion. |
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