enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Youth subculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_subculture

    Youth subculture is a youth-based subculture with distinct styles, behaviors, and interests. Youth subcultures offer participants an identity outside of that ascribed by social institutions such as family, work, home and school. Youth subcultures that show a systematic hostility to the dominant culture are sometimes described as countercultures ...

  3. List of subcultures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_subcultures

    Flat Earth Society [41] [42] [43] ... History of modern Western subcultures; Outline of culture; List of fandom names; Youth subculture; Notes ...

  4. Youth culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_culture

    Example of a participant of emo youth subculture [citation needed] For decades, adults have worried that youth subcultures were the root of moral degradation and changing values in younger generations. [4] Researchers have characterized youth culture as embodying values that are "in conflict with those of the adult world". [13]

  5. Subculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subculture

    A subculture is a group of people within a cultural society that differentiates itself from the values of the conservative, standard or dominant culture to which it belongs, often maintaining some of its founding principles. Subcultures develop their own norms and values regarding cultural, political, and sexual matters.

  6. History of modern Western subcultures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_modern_Western...

    Many 2010s subcultures drew from previously existing groups - the popular 'e-girl' subculture is seen as a modern spin on mid-2000s scene fashion. [7] As part of their retrospective series on the 2010s, Dazed magazine described the impact of technology on subcultures; "But [the internet] also gave us more; it gave us dozens upon dozens of ...

  7. Counterculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterculture

    Gay liberation (considered a precursor of various modern LGBT social movements) was known for its links to the counterculture of the time (e.g. groups like the Radical Faeries), and for the gay liberationists' intent to transform or abolish fundamental institutions of society such as gender and the nuclear family; [30] in general, the politics ...

  8. Teddy Boys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teddy_Boys

    Teddy boys playing music at the Queens Hotel, 1977 Teddy boys walking on a busy street, 1977. The Teddy Boys or Teds were a mainly British youth subculture of the early 1950s to mid-1960s who were interested in rock and roll and R&B music, wearing clothes partly inspired by the styles worn by dandies in the Edwardian period, which Savile Row tailors had attempted to re-introduce in Britain ...

  9. Subcultural theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subcultural_theory

    Phil Cohen (1972) studied the youth of East London in the early 1970s. He examined the immediate and the wider context to determine how two different youth subcultures reacted to the changes occurring in their community. He suggested that the Mod reaction was to the new ideology of affluence. They wanted to show that they had money and knew how ...