Dictionary Definition
subculture n : a social group within a national
culture that has distinctive patterns of behavior and beliefs
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Extensive Definition
- For the term in biology, see subculture
(biology).
- For the song by New Order, see Sub-culture (song).
As early as 1950, David
Riesman distinguished between a majority, "which passively
accepted commercially
provided styles and meanings, and a 'subculture' which actively
sought a minority
style...and interpreted it in accordance with subversive values". Sarah
Thornton, drawing on Pierre Bourdieu, has described
'subcultural capital' as the cultural knowledge and commodities
acquired by members of a subculture, raising their status and
helping differentiate themselves from members of other
groups.
Identifying subcultures
Subcultures can be distinctive because of the age, race, ethnicity, class, location, and/or gender of the members. The qualities that determine a subculture as distinct may be linguistic, aesthetic, religious, political, sexual, geographical, or a combination of factors. Members of a subculture often signal their membership through a distinctive and symbolic use of style, which includes fashions, mannerisms, and argot. They also live out particular relations to places: Ken Gelder talks about 'subcultural geographies' along these lines.The study of subcultures often consists of the
study of symbolism attached to clothing, music and other visible
affectations by members of subcultures, and also the ways in which
these same symbols are interpreted by members of the dominant
culture. Subcultures have been chronicled by others for a long
time, documented, analysed, classified, rationalised, monitored,
scrutinised. In some cases - think of homeless subcultures or
criminal gangs or skateboarders - subcultures have been legislated
against, their activities regulated or curtailed. But subcultures
also talk about themselves, constantly. It is helpful to think
about subcultural narratives, told either by subcultures or about
them by others. Subcultural narratives - whether one approves or
disapproves, what one assumes about a subculture, the tone of one's
engagement with a subculture - are a matter of position-taking.
There are no neutral accounts of subcultures.
Subcultures' relationships with mainstream culture
It may be difficult to identify certain subcultures because their style (particularly clothing and music) may be adopted by mass culture for commercial purposes. Businesses often seek to capitalize on the subversive allure of subcultures in search of cool, which remains valuable in the selling of any product. This process of cultural appropriation may often result in the death or evolution of the subculture, as its members adopt new styles that appear alien to mainstream society. This process provides a constant stream of styles which may be commercially adopted.Music-based subcultures are particularly
vulnerable to this process, and so what may be considered a
subculture at one stage in its history — such as jazz, goth,
punk,
hip
hop and rave
cultures — may represent mainstream taste within a short period
of time. Some subcultures reject or modify the importance of style,
stressing membership through the adoption of an ideology which may be much more
resistant to commercial exploitation.
Punk subculture
The punk subculture's distinctive (and initially shocking) style of clothing was adopted by mass-market fashion companies once the subculture became a media interest. According to Dick Hebdige, subcultural styles are distinguished from mainstream styles by being intentionally fabricated. He argues that the punk subculture shares the same "radical aesthetic practices" as Dada and surrealism:''Like Duchamp's 'ready mades' - manufactured
objects which qualified as art because he chose to call them such,
the most unremarkable and inappropriate items - a pin, a plastic
clothes peg, a television component, a razor blade, a tampon -
could be brought within the province of punk (un)fashion...Objects
borrowed from the most sordid of contexts found a place in punks'
ensembles; lavatory chains were draped in graceful arcs across
chests in plastic bin liners. Safety pins were taken out of their
domestic 'utility' context and worn as gruesome ornaments through
the cheek, ear or lip...fragments of school uniform (white
bri-nylon shirts, school ties) were symbolically defiled (the
shirts covered in graffiti, or fake blood; the ties left undone)
and juxtaposed against leather drains or shocking pink mohair
tops.
Urban tribes
In 1985, French sociologist Michel Maffesoli coined the term urban tribe, and it gained widespread use after the publication of his Le temps des tribus: le déclin de l'individualisme dans les sociétés postmodernes (1988). Eight years later, this book was published in the United Kingdom as The Time of the Tribes: The Decline of Individualism in Mass Society''.According to Maffesoli, urban tribes are
microgroups of people who share common interests in metropolitan
areas. The members of these relatively small groups tend to have
similar worldviews, dress styles and behavioral patterns. Their
social
interactions are largely informal and
emotionally-laden, different than late
capitalism's corporate-bourgeoisie cultures, based
on dispassionate logic. Maffesoli claims that punks are
a typical example of an "urban tribe".
Five years after the first English translation of
Le temps des tribus, writer Ethan Watters claims to have coined the
same neologism in a
New
York Times Magazine article. This was later expanded upon the
idea in his book Urban Tribes: A Generation Redefines Friendship,
Family, and Commitment. According Watters, urban tribes are groups
of never-married's between
the ages of 25 and 45 who gather in common-interest groups and
enjoy an urban lifestyle, which offers an
alternative to traditional family structures.
Footnotes
References
- Gay Men and the Forms of Contemporary US Culture
- Gelder, Ken (2007). Subcultures: Cultural Histories and Social Practice (Routledge, March 2007; softcover ISBN 0-415-37952-0)
- Hebdige, Dick (1979). Subculture: The Meaning of Style (Routledge, March 10, 1981; softcover ISBN 0-415-03949-5). Cited in Negus, Keith (1996). Popular Music in Theory: An Introduction. Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 0-8195-6310-2.
- Huq, Rupa (2006) 'Beyond subculture' (Routledge, 2006; softcover ISBN 0-415-27815-5. Hardcover ISBN 0-415-27814-7)
- Maffesoli, Michel (1996). The Time of the Tribes: The Decline of Individualism in Mass Society. (London: Sage Publications. ISBN-10: 080398474X)
- McKay, George (1996) Senseless Acts of Beauty: Cultures of Resistance since the Sixties. (London: Verso. ISBN 1-85984-028-0.)
- McKay, George (2005) Circular Breathing: The Cultural Politics of Jazz in Britain. Durham NC: Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-3573-5.
- Riesman, David (1950). "Listening to popular music", American Quarterly, 2, p.359-71. Cited in Middleton, Richard (1990/2002). Studying Popular Music, p.155. Philadelphia: Open University Press. ISBN 0-335-15275-9.
- Thornton, Sarah (1995). Club Cultures: Music, Media, and Subcultural Capital. Cambridge: Polity Press. Cited in Negus, Keith (1996). Popular Music in Theory: An Introduction. Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 0-8195-6310-2.
- Watters, Ethan (2003). Urban Tribes: A Generation Redefines Friendship, Family, and Commitment. ISBN 1-58234-264-4.
See also
External links
- http://www.intcul.tohoku.ac.jp/~holden/MediatedSociety/Readings/2003_04/Appadurai.html - Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Economy
- http://depts.washington.edu/chid/intersections.php?article=1994e - "Punk and the Aesthetics of American Dystopia."
- http://webfiles.uci.edu/mkaminsk/www/book.html - Games Prisoners Play
- What are Urban Tribes? on http://www.urbantribes.net/
subculture in Bulgarian: Субкултура
subculture in Czech: Subkultura
subculture in Danish: Subkultur
subculture in German: Subkultur
subculture in Estonian: Subkultuur
subculture in Spanish: Subcultura
subculture in Persian: خردهفرهنگ
subculture in French: Sous-culture
subculture in Western Frisian: Subkultuer
subculture in Indonesian: Subkultur
subculture in Italian: Subcultura
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subculture in Latvian: Subkultūra
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subculture in Hungarian: Underground
subculture in Dutch: Subcultuur
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subculture in Norwegian: Subkultur
subculture in Polish: Subkultura
subculture in Portuguese: Subcultura
subculture in Romanian: Subcultură
subculture in Russian: Субкультура
subculture in Slovak: Subkultúra
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subculture in Serbian: Potkultura
subculture in Serbo-Croatian: Potkultura
subculture in Finnish: Alakulttuuri
subculture in Swedish: Subkultur
subculture in Thai: วัฒนธรรมย่อย
subculture in Turkish: Altkültür
subculture in Chinese: 次文化