1st Edition

Boy Racer Culture Youth, Masculinity and Deviance

By Karen Lumsden Copyright 2013
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    On the public roads boy racers are a foreboding presence, viewed with suspicion and derision by the ‘respectable’ motorist. The problem of the young (male) driver is one which has plagued authorities and governments due to youths’ acclaimed propensity to engage in deviant and dangerous driving behaviours.

    Boy Racer Culture sheds light on the boy racer phenomenon through ethnographic research with the notorious ‘Bouley Basher’ culture in the city of Aberdeen, Scotland, and the moral panic on the part of outside groups including the local community, police, politicians and media. This book examines the creation of masculine and feminine identities in a traditionally male-dominated subculture through car-related rituals such as ‘modding’, subcultural media and events, and the quest for celebrity status via public performances.

    Boy Racer Culture challenges common misconceptions surrounding the boy racer, the ‘problematic’ young (male) motorist and the car modifier. It will be essential reading for an international audience including sociologists and criminologists, particularly those with an interest in youth culture, subcultures, moral panics, car culture, anti-social behaviour, and the governance and policing of the roads.

    Introduction: Rebels of the Road  1. Car Cultures and Deviance  2. Setting the Scene: The History of Aberdeen’s Boy Racers  3. Fuelling the Panic: Societal Concern and Media Images of the Boy Racer  4. The Politics of the Road: Policing, Governing and Educating the Boy Racer  5.'We're not Boy Racers but they are': The Stickiness of Labels  6. Rites of the Road: 'Modding', Subcultural Media and Public Performances  7. Gendered Interactions in the Boy Racer Culture  8. Conclusion: Contested Realities.

    Biography

    Dr Karen Lumsden is a Lecturer in Sociology at Loughborough University, UK and was formerly a Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Abertay Dundee. She has a PhD in Sociology, a Masters in Social Research, and a MA (Hons) in Sociology from the University of Aberdeen. Her research interests include youth culture, car culture, crime and deviance, gender, moral panics, policing and qualitative research methods.