'Do we look like boy racers?' The role of the folk devil in contemporary moral panics
Author(s)
Lumsden, KarenContributor(s)
Abertay University. School of Social & Health SciencesKeywords
Boy racersCar cultures
Ethnography
Media
Moral panics
Youth
Subcultures
Ethnology
Moral panics
Youth
Subculture
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This article addresses the failure of studies concerning moral panics to take into account the reaction of those individuals who are the subject of social anxiety. It responds to the suggestion by McRobbie and Thornton (1995) that studies of moral panic need to account for the role played by the ‘folk devils’ themselves, for a moral panic is a collective process (Young, 2007). The paper presents findings from ethnographic fieldwork with the ‘boy racer’ culture in Aberdeen, qualitative interviews with members of ‘outside’ groups, and content analysis of media articles. The societal reaction to the ‘boy racer’ subculture in Aberdeen is evidence of a contemporary moral panic. The media’s representation of the subculture contributed to the stigmatization of young drivers and the labelling of the subculture’s activities as deviant and antisocial. The drivers were aware of their negative portrayal in the media; however their attempts to change the myth of the ‘boy racer’ were unsuccessful. Although subcultural media can provide an outlet of self-expression for youths, these forms of media can also become caught-up in the moral panic. Ironically the youths’ own niche and micro media reified the (ir)rationality for the moral panic.Date
2012-02-07Type
Journal ArticleIdentifier
oai:repository.abertay.ac.uk:10373/1150Lumsden, K. 2009. 'Do we look like boy racers?' The role of the folk devil in contemporary moral panics. Sociological Research Online. 14(1). Available from http://dx.doi.org/10.5153/sro.1840
1360-7804
http://hdl.handle.net/10373/1150
http://www.socresonline.org.uk/14/1/2.html
10.5153/sro.1840