Friday, November 6, 2009

Representation of young people

(I've taken this straight from the SFX English Language blog as I thought it might be helpful for ENGA2 teachers.)

Hoodies, thugs, yobs, feral youths, louts and scum. That's what many readers of this blog are, if you subscribe to the popular view that all young people (particularly if they're from the inner city and/or black and/or working class) are unruly troublemakers.

Jane Graham writing in today's Guardian, in a piece mainly about the new Michael Caine film, Harry Brown*, points out that the hooded youth or "hoodie" has now become a kind of visual or linguistic shorthand for a new kind of folk devil, a new bogeyman for the twenty first century. As Graham points out, hoodies are "defined by their class (perceived as being bottom of the heap) and their social standing (their relationship to society is always seen as being oppositional). Hoodies aren't "kids" or "youngsters" or even "rebels" – in fact, recent research by Women in Journalism on regional and national newspaper reporting of hoodies shows that the word is most commonly interchanged with (in order of popularity) "yob", "thug", "lout" and "scum"".

And the research by Women in Journalism referred to above makes for some fascinating reading. The headline statistics that they use in the report "Hoodies or Altar Boys?" are as follows:

* 85% of teen boys said newspapers portray them in a bad light
* Reality TV was seen as portraying teen boys most fairly
* Media stories about yobs and hoodies are the main reason why teen
boys are wary of other teenagers
* 80% of teen boys think adults are more wary of them now than they were a year ago.
* Terms used in newspaper stories about teen boys included thugs, yobs, hoodies, feral, evil, lout, monsters, brutes, scum, menace, heartless, sick, menacing and inhuman
* Over the past year, there were more newspaper stories about teens and crime (as victims or offenders) than about teens and all other subjects put together

* Even on subjects other than crime, few newspaper stories show teen boys in a good light: only 24% of stories about teens and sport were positive about teenage boys; only 16% of stories about teens and entertainment were positive.
Fiona Bawdon, the WiJ committee member who will be presenting the research, says: “When a photo of a group of perfectly ordinary lads standing around wearing hooded tops has become visual shorthand for urban menace, or even the breakdown of society, it's clear that teenage boys have a serious image problem. The teen boys' "brand" has become toxic. Media coverage of boys is unrelentingly negative, focusing almost entirely on them as victims or perpetrators of crime - and our research shows that the media is helping make teenage boys fearful of each other.”


So, as students of English Language, particularly if you're doing ENGA2 work on the representation of young people, this is fertile ground to investigate. The links on the Women in Journalism site are really helpful too, as they point us towards some particularly relevant articles such as Suzanne Moore's thoughtful piece in The Daily Mail here and The Labour MP David Lammy's excellent comment column here.

And just to remind you of how very similar students to yourselves are referred to in the national press and by members of the public, why not have a read of this appalling tripe from the Daily Mail and some of the deranged comments of its readers on a recent unpleasant incident linked to Orpington College, a "scum magnet" according to an equally unpleasant article in The Sun.

*set in Elephant and Castle, south London fact fans

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Bunty, Jackie etc

Today's freebie is Tammy ( don't remember it myself) but some of the material might be usefully compared with Jacqueline Wilson (a story about a girl who looks after her family since the death of her mum). 'The Slaves of War Orphan Farm' (seriously) could be used in conjunction with some misery lit - but I'm not volunteering to read that.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Bunty and Jackie

The Guardian's running reprints of 1970s comics in every edition this week. The Jackie and Bunty ones are class for analysing representation of gender (if a bit embarrassing to be seen reading on the train). I'll try to scan a few pages in and add them this weekend.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Kim Clijsters

Sit down before you read this. A woman who has had a baby (yes, a mum) has managed to do something else as well - in this case win a tennis tournament.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/sep/14/kim-clijsters-motherhood

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/woman/parenting/2636817/Mums-the-word-for-sport-glory.htm

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Social workers

There's a new recruitment campaign on to persuade people to become social workers... just as well after last year's Baby P and this year's Edlington media maulings.

It's called Give Them a Voice and it's here.
The Daily Mail appears surprised that social workers can't be recruited here

Pass Notes

Great news - Guardian Pass Notes is back. Possible model for part of the intervention in ENGA4. See http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/sep/08/pass-notes-return-g2

Monday, September 7, 2009

Second World War

The latest series of Guardian booklets contains short extracts from The Manchester Guardian from the period of the Second World War. Could be useful...

Friday, September 4, 2009

Representation of female tennis players

Stumbled across this excellent feminist take on how female tennis players are represented through language while looking for something else. There's also some very good stuff in Lia Litosseliti's Gender and Language: Theory and Practice, a text that I came across last year and used successfully with AS ENGA2 students.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Women beware women

Joanna Bourke takes a look at coverage of women's violence and asks why it's not reported in the same ways as men's violence.

Women Beware Women

Charlie Brooker on men

It's typical Charlie Brooker style - opinionated, rude, a bit surreal - but lots of fun for taking  a look at gender from a different perspective.

Charlie Brooker in The Guardian

Friday, February 27, 2009

Encouraging understanding of difference

Here's a piece from today's BBC website about attempts to offer positive representations and increased understanding of mental health problems to teenagers.

We used The Curious Incident... as an example of a text that makes an intervention into how disability and mental health (or just perceived "weirdness") might be represented, and this article could be a helpful complementary text.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Positive representations of young people

Article in this week's Guardian about the "happiness league" for young people. This could be a useful counterpoint to the scaremongering of other, less flattering representations elsewhere on the blog.

More friends and emotional security...