Youth for Sale: Using Critical Disability Perspectives to Examine the Embodiment of ‘Youth’

‘Youth’ is more complicated than an age-bound period of life; although implicitly paired with developmentalism, youth is surrounded by contradictory discourses. In other work [1], I have asserted that young people are demonized as risky and rebellious, whilst simultaneously criticized for being lazy...

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Main Author: Jenny Slater
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-09-01
Series:Societies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/2/3/195
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spelling doaj-75263e8672c14939aa492904074bd48a2020-11-24T22:08:42ZengMDPI AGSocieties2075-46982012-09-012319520910.3390/soc2030195Youth for Sale: Using Critical Disability Perspectives to Examine the Embodiment of ‘Youth’Jenny Slater‘Youth’ is more complicated than an age-bound period of life; although implicitly paired with developmentalism, youth is surrounded by contradictory discourses. In other work [1], I have asserted that young people are demonized as risky and rebellious, whilst simultaneously criticized for being lazy and apathetic; two intertwining, yet conflicting discourses meaning that young people’s here-and-now experiences take a backseat to a focus on reaching idealized, neoliberal adulthood [2]. Critical examination of adulthood ideals, however, shows us that ‘youthfulness’ is itself presented as a goal of adulthood [3–5], as there is a desire, as adults, to remain forever young [6]. As Blatterer puts it, the ideal is to be “adult and youthful but not adolescent” ([3], p. 74). This paper attempts to untangle some of the youth/adult confusion by asking how the aspiration/expectation of a youthful body plays out in the embodied lives of young dis/abled people. To do this, I use a feminist-disability lens to consider youth in an abstracted form, not as a life-stage, but as the end goal of an aesthetic project of the self that we are all (to differing degrees) encouraged to set out upon.http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/2/3/195youthdisabilityfeministfeminist-disabilityembodimenttimecrip timesociology of childhoodcommodification
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jenny Slater
spellingShingle Jenny Slater
Youth for Sale: Using Critical Disability Perspectives to Examine the Embodiment of ‘Youth’
Societies
youth
disability
feminist
feminist-disability
embodiment
time
crip time
sociology of childhood
commodification
author_facet Jenny Slater
author_sort Jenny Slater
title Youth for Sale: Using Critical Disability Perspectives to Examine the Embodiment of ‘Youth’
title_short Youth for Sale: Using Critical Disability Perspectives to Examine the Embodiment of ‘Youth’
title_full Youth for Sale: Using Critical Disability Perspectives to Examine the Embodiment of ‘Youth’
title_fullStr Youth for Sale: Using Critical Disability Perspectives to Examine the Embodiment of ‘Youth’
title_full_unstemmed Youth for Sale: Using Critical Disability Perspectives to Examine the Embodiment of ‘Youth’
title_sort youth for sale: using critical disability perspectives to examine the embodiment of ‘youth’
publisher MDPI AG
series Societies
issn 2075-4698
publishDate 2012-09-01
description ‘Youth’ is more complicated than an age-bound period of life; although implicitly paired with developmentalism, youth is surrounded by contradictory discourses. In other work [1], I have asserted that young people are demonized as risky and rebellious, whilst simultaneously criticized for being lazy and apathetic; two intertwining, yet conflicting discourses meaning that young people’s here-and-now experiences take a backseat to a focus on reaching idealized, neoliberal adulthood [2]. Critical examination of adulthood ideals, however, shows us that ‘youthfulness’ is itself presented as a goal of adulthood [3–5], as there is a desire, as adults, to remain forever young [6]. As Blatterer puts it, the ideal is to be “adult and youthful but not adolescent” ([3], p. 74). This paper attempts to untangle some of the youth/adult confusion by asking how the aspiration/expectation of a youthful body plays out in the embodied lives of young dis/abled people. To do this, I use a feminist-disability lens to consider youth in an abstracted form, not as a life-stage, but as the end goal of an aesthetic project of the self that we are all (to differing degrees) encouraged to set out upon.
topic youth
disability
feminist
feminist-disability
embodiment
time
crip time
sociology of childhood
commodification
url http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/2/3/195
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