1st Edition
Keywords in Youth Studies Tracing Affects, Movements, Knowledges
With recent attention to issues such as youth social exclusion, poverty, school underachievement, school violence, gang activity, sexuality, and youth’s interactions with media and the internet, youth studies has emerged as a significant interdisciplinary field. It has moved beyond its roots in subcultural studies to encompass a diverse array of disciplines, subfields, and theoretical orientations. Yet no volume exists that systematically presents and puts into dialogue the field’s areas of focus and approaches to research.
As a unique blend of reference guide, conceptual dictionary, and critical assessment, Keywords in Youth Studies presents and historicizes the "state of the field." It offers theoretically-informed analysis of key concepts, and points to possibilities for youth studies’ reconstruction. Contributors include internationally-renowned field experts who trace the origins, movements, and uses and meanings of "keywords" such as resistance, youth violence, surveillance, and more. The blending of section essays with focused keywords offers beginning and advanced readers multiple points of entry into the text and connections across concepts. A must-read for graduate students, faculty, and researchers across a range of disciplines, this extraordinary new book promotes new interdisciplinary approaches to youth research and advocacy.
An Introduction to Seven Technologies of Youth Studies, Susan Talburt and Nancy Lesko
Section I: A History of the Present of Youth Studies, Susan Talburt and Nancy Lesko
- Biology/Nature, Elizabeth Seaton
- (Dis)ability, Beth A. Ferri
- Juvenile Justice, Erica Meiners
- Leisure, Carles Feixa
- Middle School, Julie McLeod
- School-to-Work Transition, Meg Maguire and Stephen J. Ball
- Surveillance, Rachel Oppenheim
- Commodification, Lisa Weems
- Culture, Mikko Salasuo and Tommi Hoikkala
- Ethnographies, Wanda S. Pillow
- Histories, Andrew J. Reisinger
- Peer Groups, Johanna Wyn
- Transnational Governance Organizations, Noah W. Sobe
- Age, Yen Yen Woo
- Disorderly, Valerie Harwood
- Generation, Cindy Patton
- Resistance, Elizabeth Soep
- Subculture, Martha Marín Caicedo
- Trans, Alejondro Venegas-Steele
- Democracy, Benjamin Baez
- Hijab, Amira Jarmakani
- Human Rights, Julie Kubala
- Mall, Carolyn Vander Schee
- Nation, Rupa Huq
- Postcolonial, Aaron Koh and Allan Luke
- Sex Education, Mary Louise Rasmussen
- Health, Emma Rich
- Immigrant, Claudia Matus
- Internet, Lori B. MacIntosh, Stuart Poyntz, and Mary K. Bryson
- Musicking, Julian Henriques
- Sexuality, Mary Jane Kehily
- TV and Film, Bill Osgerby
- Cultural Production, John Broughton
- Hybridity, Pam Nilan
- Safe Spaces, M. Piper Dumont
- Street Children, Rob Pattman
- Style, Kristen Luschen
- Youth Violence, Todd R. Ramlow
- The Erotic, Jen Gilbert
- Innocence, Elizabeth Marshall
- NGOs, Dana Burde
- Nostalgia, Kaoru Miyazawa
- Teacher Movies, Rebecca Stanko
- Youth Activism, Noel S. Anderson
- Youth Participatory Action Research, Michelle Fine
Section II: Research and Regulation of Knowledge, Thomas S. Popkewitz
Section III: Populational Reasoning, Gordon Tait
Section IV: Citizenship Stories, Anita Harris
Section V: Mobilities and the Transnationalization of Youth Cultures, Fazal Rizvi
Section VI: Everyday Exceptions: Geographies of Social Imaginaries, Sunaina Maira
Section VII: Enchantment, Nancy Lesko and Susan Talburt
Biography
Nancy Lesko is Professor of Education and Maxine Greene Chair at Teachers College, Columbia University.
Susan Talburt is Director and Associate Professor of Women’s Studies at Georgia State University.
"This theoretically informed text would be of interest to graduate students and scholars from a range of disciplines, and especially those who adopt an interdisciplinary perspective on youth research. It not only serves as a conceptual dictionary and introduction to the field, but also enacts the fluidity and constant movement that it argues for by critically engaging with the production of sedimented concepts and ideas related to youth." ― Shenila S. Khoja-Moolji, Journal of Human Rights Review