Abstract
Kinderculture, as a youth subcultural form, reflects young people’s unique phenomenological perspectives of how they experience society. It represents the landscape wherein young people engage in a persistent discourse with the hegemonic dominant culture and with the subordinated cultures of their parents as they construct, disseminate, and perform their subcultural forms. They provide an essential counternarrative that critically challenges the rhetoric of cultural normativity imbued in the generational culture of their parents that permeates our hegemonic society.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
REFERENCES
Back, L. (1996). New ethnicities and urban culture: Racisms and multiculture in young lives. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
Blair, M. E. (2004). Commercialization of the rap music youth subculture. In M. Forman & M. A. Neal (Eds.), That’s the joint!: The hip-hop studies reader. New York: Routledge.
Chomsky, N. (2000). Chomsky on miseducation. New York: Rowman, & Littlefield Publisher, Inc.
Corrigan, P., & Frith, S. (1976). The politics of youth culture. In S. Hall & T. Jefferson (Eds.), Resistance through rituals: Youth subcultures in post-war Britain. London: Hutchinson, & Co. Ltd.
Gelder, K., & Thornton, S. (Eds.). (1997). The subcultures reader. New York: Routledge.
Heyes, C. (2009, Spring Edition). Identity politics. In E. N. Zalta (Ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved from http://www.plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2002/entries/identity-politics/
Kincheloe, J. L. (1997). McDonald’s, power, and children: Ronald McDonald (aka Ray Kroc) Does it all for you. In S. R. Steinberg & J. Kincheloe (Eds.), Kinderculture: The corporate construction of childhood. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Maher, G. C. (2005). Brechtian Hip-Hop: Didactics and self-production in Post-Gangsta political mixtapes. Journal of Black Studies, 36(1), 129–160.
Martin, G. (2002). Conceptualizing cultural politics in subcultural and social movement studies. Social Movement Studies, 1(1), 73–85.
Nightingale, C. H. (1993). On the edge. New York: Basic Books.
Powell, K. (2004). The hip-hop generation. Socialism and Democracy, 18(2), 7–8.
Rose, T. (1994). Black noise: Rap music and black culture in contemporary America. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press.
Smith, L. T. (2001). Decolonizing methodologies: Research and indigenous peoples. New York: Zed Books.
Thornton, S. (1996). Club cultures: Music, media and subcultural capital. New Hampshire: University Press of New England.
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2011 Sense Publishers
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Hayes, K. (2011). The Corporate Paradise of A Subverted Urban Kinderculture. In: Hayes, K., Steinberg, S.R., Tobin, K. (eds) Key Works in Critical Pedagogy. Bold Visions in Educational Research, vol 32. SensePublishers. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-397-6_14
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-397-6_14
Publisher Name: SensePublishers
Online ISBN: 978-94-6091-397-6
eBook Packages: Humanities, Social Sciences and LawEducation (R0)