Youth, Class and Everyday Struggles

Exploring the complexities of youth in contemporary society

Steven Threadgold author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:18th Sep '17

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Youth, Class and Everyday Struggles cover

This insightful book examines how young people navigate class struggles and societal expectations, highlighting their choices and challenges in today's world. Youth, Class and Everyday Struggles offers a fresh perspective.

In Youth, Class and Everyday Struggles, Threadgold explores the intersection of Bourdieu’s sociological practices with theories of affect, emotion, morals, and values. This integration deepens our understanding of how young individuals navigate their choices, adapt to their circumstances, strategize for success, face failures, and ultimately make do with what they have. By examining the concept of everyday struggles, the book sheds light on the complexities of youth experiences and the ongoing formation of social class.

The narrative highlights how young people are influenced by societal norms from an early age, while they simultaneously recognize that the incentives for making 'right' choices—such as financial stability, social status, and job satisfaction—are increasingly elusive. Through the lens of Bourdieu’s theories, Youth, Class and Everyday Struggles delves into the pressures and expectations that shape the lives of youth today.

Threadgold uses the archetypes of 'hipsters' and 'bogans' to analyze the symbolic and moral economy that defines and enforces class boundaries. Additionally, the book examines the DIY culture among young people, illustrating their struggles to forge meaningful lives while balancing education, work, and creative pursuits. By addressing various modalities of struggle related to identity, creativity, and authenticity, Threadgold provides a comprehensive perspective on the challenges faced by today's youth, making this work invaluable for students and researchers in related fields.

‘Struggle’ is one of those over-used words we use to evoke a political ‘feel’ to analysis. In Youth, Class and Everyday Struggles, however, Steven Threadgold takes the idea of struggle seriously, and develops a multi-layered understanding of struggle to provide an exciting and insightful analysis of the challenges young people negotiate in everyday life. Drawing together a thoughtful reading of Bourdieu through theories of affect, risk and reflexivity, Threadgold shows that struggle is fundamental to the constitution of young people’s classed and gendered existence in a world shaped by precarity. Through an examination of hipsters, 'bogans' and DIY music, the book argues not only that there are modalities and temporalities to struggle, but that struggle is creative and mundane, agentic and oppressive. It offers an original and thought-provoking contribution to the field of youth studies.

Greg Noble, Professor, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University, Australia

A smart, sensitive and sophisticated analysis of how youth figures in the ways class is produced and contested in conditions of precarity. Centring the concept of struggle, Threadgold incisively addresses the cultural politics and quotidian material realities of new and old class relations through careful attention to the everyday lives of young people. This book is an important contribution to the theorisation of social class today, and a shining example of truly generative scholarship at the intersection of youth transitions and youth cultures research.​

Anita Harris, Research Professor, Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Faculty of Arts & Education, Deakin University, Australia

This is an excellent book that pushes the boundaries of theorising in youth studies to another level. By using the notion of ‘struggle’ and other Bourdieusian concepts, Steve Threadgold is able to create a more nuanced understanding of the contemporary forms of class social reproduction and youth reflexivity. As such this book is a must read for all students and scholars interested in the youth question.

Alan France, Professor of Sociology, University of Auckland, New Zealand

Youth, Class and Everyday Struggles is a masterfully researched and compellingly written book. Casting an expert eye over an increasingly diverse field, Threadgold has produced a much needed synthesis of key ideas relating to youth cultures and youth transitions that will be of seminal value to both experienced youth researchers and students in search of a critical introduction to youth studies.

Andy Bennett, Professor, School of Humanities, Griffith University, Australia

ISBN: 9781138849983

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 544g

260 pages