Myths and rituals surrounding delinquent gangs in Edinburgh and Dundee
dc.contributor.author
Fitzpatrick, Sean A.T.
en
dc.date.accessioned
2013-06-26T13:43:43Z
dc.date.available
2013-06-26T13:43:43Z
dc.date.issued
1980
dc.description.abstract
At the time of this research (1971-73) the 'problem' of group
violence had become an area of public concern in Edinburgh and Dundee. The Media and the Courts, as well as those agencies involved in
working with young people, tended to put forward an interpretation
based on the 'gang' as a structured phenomenon.
However, work in the field suggested that this explanation
over-simplified the issues involved and that 'ganging' could only
be adequately described if it were placed in a social context rather
wider than that suggested by any of the contemporary areas of deviancy
theory. In short, a brief outline of the 'development' of theories
of deviance suggests the need for a 'cultural' explanation rather
than a more limited view based variously on infraction, a 'search
for differences', the phenomenon, social reaction or a class analysis.
Having suggested the need for a 'cultural* explanation, a discussion of some of the major views of 'culture' (especially Marxist
and Structural-Functionalist) reveals a tendency towards mutual
exclusion, with an emphasis in the former on 'conflict* and in the
latter on 'consensus'. Neither seems adequately to approach the central issues of unity and diversity in contemporary British Society.
A heuristic and exploratory approach to 'culture' is required which
allows for man's ability to adapt to, and sometimes transcend, inequality and 'repression', while at the same time remaining in some
way a 'member' of the total society.
Briefly, the suggestion is that this problematic can only be
resolved, albeit in a tentative fashion, by the 'rediscovery' of the
centrality of the symbol in 'cultural' studies. A greater emphasis
is required on the ways in which symbolic adaptations 'defuse' and
adapt 'contradictions' in the material circumstance and also on the
complex ways in which 'key' values disseminate a symbolic 'togetherness'.
Again, although these concepts are exploratory, requiring refinement and validation in the field, a discussion of 'ganging' takes
place in terms of a contemporary view of adolescence and the primacy
of symbolic structures in that 'liminal' period. It is suggested
that such a view of 'ganging' as symbolic structure is more informative than an interpretation based on a 'myopic' view of infraction
and deviancy without reference to a 'cultural' context.
en
dc.identifier.other
256061
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/7163
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.publisher
University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
Sociology
en
dc.subject
Human
en
dc.subject
services
en
dc.subject
Anthropology
en
dc.subject
Folklore
en
dc.title
Myths and rituals surrounding delinquent gangs in Edinburgh and Dundee
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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