Girls and subcultures: Angela McRobbie and Jenny Garber . McRobbie, Angela and Garber, Jenny.1977. (see McRobbie and Garber, 1976; Frith, 1978), emphasizing how teenage girls’ search for personal identity through self-presentation and the development of 2 'taste' has been led, exploited even, by powerful commercial interests in the fashion and music industries. The Bedroom Culture: A Feminism perspective. Ethnographic work and textual analyses of girls and subcultures, as well as studies of girls and of schooling, often overlap. ISBN 978-0091279110 [Book Section] they largely absent from so many studies (Canaan 1991) McRobbie and Garber’s (1975) consideration of the position of girls in relation to youth cultures in the UK provided a valuable insight into young peo-ple’s cultural worlds from a gendered perspective, paralleling develop-ments in North America that document the emergence of new forms of (McRobbie&Garber 1976 p.212) Teddy Boys & Girls – recognizing womens participation (towards equal access, visibility and sharing) Teddy Girls – finding girls on their own (towards autonomous cultures) New Teddy Girls – provoking feminist interventions . Hutchinson and the CCCS Birmingham (also an Open University Reader). By ANGELA MCROBBIE, JENNY GARBER. Where is gender in all this? At the heart of the problem is the way that subcultures are defined, as they focus on public spaces where boys have greater access rather than the private spaces to which most girls are confined. chapter 17 | 10 pages The politics of youth culture: Paul Corrigan and Simon Frith . boys and young men (McRobbie and Garber 1976; McRobbie 1980) and opened up attention to the cul-tural lives of girls and young wom-en. This sub-discipline, often known as ‘girls studies’, seeks to affirm the political agency and cultural produc - tivity of girls and … 14 McROBBIE and GARBER, 1975, p. 212, our translation. chapter 16 | 6 pages A note on marginality: Rachel Powell and John Clarke . By PAUL CORRIGAN, SIMON FRITH. McRobbie and Garber (1976) critiqued the Birmingham School for their lack of attention to girls and their silence about masculinity in subcultures. 3 collected for her field study in Campinas, the author highlights a set of elements that For teenage girls in particular, the bedroom is a sacred place; a place where they can meet and gossip with their friends at sleepovers, a place where they can cry over boys, a place where they can spend endless hours on the internet. Resistance Through Ritual - Youth Subcultures in Post-war Britain. McRobbie and Garber (1976) suggest that in the safety of their rooms, girls can express cultural desires without publicly displaying a break with society’s expectation of girls’ behavior. 15 MAGRO, 2003. By RACHEL POWELL, JOHN CLARKE. graphic study of subcultures (McRobbie and Garber 1976 and McRobbie 1978 are early ex-ceptions), there is a growing interest in them now. In: Stuart Hall and Tony Jefferson, eds. 16 This is a doctoral thesis defended at the Faculty of Education at UNICAMP in December, 2003, in which I participated as a panel member. Girls and Subcultures. This is supported by McRobbie and Garber (1976) that the main focus of Subcultural studies is “whiteness and maleness” (Williams, 2007:581).
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