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Popular culture and moral panics about ‘children at risk’: revisiting the sexualisation-of-young-girls debate

Keywords

sexualisation moral panics leisure identity popular culture

Publication details

Year: 2015
DOI: 10.1080/14681811.2015.1022893
Issued: 2015
Language: English
Volume: 15
Issue: 5
Start Page: 500
End Page: 514
Editors:
Authors: Tsaliki L.
Type: Journal article
Journal: Sex Education
Topics: Literacy and skills
Sample: qualitative research conducted in Athens with young schoolgirls aged 10–12 years

Abstract

In an attempt to resist moral panics over children’s media consumption, and especially girls’ consumption of hyper-sexualised popular media, this paper aims to offer a more positive account of popular culture and young children’s, especially girls’, engagement with it. By adopting a historical approach to modern childhood and the moral panics associated with it, I argue that the consumption of entertainment media and popular culture is a leisure activity which, rather than facilitating or reinforcing female subordination and youth vulnerability, can be seen as a possible source of knowledge about sexuality, about the self and the social world. I draw on findings from qualitative research conducted in Athens with young schoolgirls aged 10–12 years about their favourite popular icons in order to examine the variety of their engagements with, readings and practices of popular culture. Their discursive accounts reveal the intricate ways in which pre-teenage girls make sense of fandom and stardom, discuss taste, fashion and body aesthetics, and construct notions of attractiveness and ethical selfhood.

Outcome

"respondents showed diverse practices and subject positions,ruled by the notion of self-governance" (Tsaliki, 2015, p.507) "Young pre-adolescents (or ‘tweens’) exhibit a variety of diverse readings, engagements and practices of popular culture – contrary to prevailing moral panics about viral sexualisation"(Tsaliki, 2015, p.511)

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