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Introducing the Chemo - Teen Sub-Culture Hybrid?

In our local secondary school yesterday, one of the young people we were chatting to described themselves using the label “Chemo” - meaning half Chav and half Emo.

Urban Dictionary describes the Chemo as:

A hybrid of the classic stereotypes “Chav” and “Emo” When mixed together you get a “Chemo” a “Chav” who dresses like an “emo” but still has “Chav” tendancies.

…

The most common type of chemo tends to listen to ‘emo music’ such as MCR and Fallout Boy, but still dress chavy. (longsdale hoodies, trackies ect…) 

It’s interesting, but I guess inevitable that hybrids of different teen sub-culture groups have developed (see also Choth, Swemo and Changsta).

An increasingly individualised culture must mean that individuals are increasingly unwilling or unable to be sorted into sub-cultural groups. These groups, sometimes called homogeneous units, seem to me to be becoming heterogeneous and teenagers seem to be increasingly willing to create close friendship groups which are made of people from across different social groups.

Some questions:

  1. Are sub-cultures and stereotypes the same thing?
  2. Does an increase in the number of youth sub-cultures inevitably mean that there will be too many variants for it to be worth studying them as groupings? (Is the Homogeneous Unit Principle obsolete?)
  3. Do all the members of a sub-culture have to be a perfect fit for it to be worth understanding that culture as a group, rather than as a group of individuals? 

Any thoughts?

    • #culture
    • #stereotypes
    • #sub-cultures
    • #young people
    • #youth work
    • #individualism
  • 1 year ago
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Self-promote to survive

There’s a real danger in today’s culture, especially if you’re a young person in some kind of creative industry - I even feel this as a church leader - that in order to survive and become successful, you need to end up becoming obsessed with promoting yourself.

I don’t like it.

I really don’t like the person it turns me into, the way it encourages me to relate to other people, the way it feels sometimes like it could take over my life. 

Three dangers of pursuing a lifestyle of self-promotion:

1. You become firmly rooted as the centre of your world.
Everyone else becomes a supporting character in the play of your life.

2. You end up with fans rather than friends.
The art of relating is forgotten, replaced with endless networking.

3. You rob yourself of the chance to be content with who you are.
Our identity becomes rooted in showreels and portfolios, rather than in who we are and what we mean to the people we care about.

    • #young adults
    • #self-esteem
    • #individualism
    • #culture
  • 1 year ago
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Hi, I'm James Henley, and I lead The Lab - an experimental church for young adults - in Newport, South Wales.

This blog is about growing emerging leaders by discussing the theology and practice of leadership in a rapidly-changing, post-everything culture.

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