ABSTRACT

This volume seeks to address what its contributors take to be an important lacuna in youth cultural research: a lack of interest in the phenomenon of collectivity and collective aspects of youth culture.

It gathers scholars from diverse research backgrounds – ranging from contemporary subculture studies, fan culture studies, musicology, youth transitions studies, criminology, technology and work-life studies – who all address collective phenomena in young lives. Ranging thematically from music experience and festival participation, via soccer fan culture, leisure, street art, youth climate activism, to the design of EU youth policies and Australian government ‘project’ work with young migrants, the chapters develop a variety of approaches to collective aspects to young cultural practices and material cultures. To establish these new approaches, the contributors combine new theories and fresh empirical work; they critically engage with the tradition and they complement or even reconfigure traditional approaches in and around the field.

The book will be of interest to researchers in a broad range of areas in and around the field of youth culture studies including post-subculture studies, cultural studies, musicology, fan-culture and youth transition research, but it is also of acute interest for theoretically interested sociologists. The volume offers a new afterword by French sociologist Michel Maffesoli.

chapter |27 pages

Introduction

Collectivity and youth cultural research

part I|101 pages

Part I

chapter 1|21 pages

‘I just wanted to be a part of it’

Musical experiences of youth and belonging

chapter 2|16 pages

Making time for the tribes

The work of synchronisation in the making of youth collectivities in the age of digital media

chapter 4|26 pages

Enacting the music

Collectivity and material culture in festival experience

chapter 5|17 pages

Making a brotherhood

Young ultras beyond the match

part II|91 pages

Part Ii

chapter 6|24 pages

Learning from Willis's Lads

Collectivity and object-oriented practice

chapter 7|20 pages

Spaces of collective individualism

Practices of collectivity for young street artists in Yogyakarta

chapter 8|21 pages

School strikes for climate

Young people, dissent and collective identities in/for the Anthropocene

chapter 9|17 pages

Scoring the refrain

Young African men in a diasporic context

chapter |7 pages

Afterword

Collective narcissism: some basics of neo-tribal sociality