Showing posts with label Males. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Males. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 February 2014

Victims of Vindication


In Framing Youth: Ten Myths About the Next Generation Mike Males describes and analyses various representations of youth in the media and reveals the logical fallacies in the reasoning that justifies these representations and the outright falsities asserted in them. Youth are portrayed in media as a direly perplexed group that culminate the issues of drugs, violence, deviance, manipulation (being the subjects of), and mindlessness. The way anything is portrayed in media has a significant effect on how the public views the given issue, thus making the issue of youth portrayal in media a serious one.
Males examines various myths about youth and shows how statistics completely disagree with such myths.  One example is the concern about youth and the danger the Internet poses to them. He notes the preoccupation with children becoming victims of pedophiles through communication on the internet, and how in reality there are very few cases per year. Cases of teenage driving and teenage violence are also used as examples of statistical disagreements with the media’s representation of youth. Although statistics don’t provide indisputable evidence in many cases due to various variables, small sample sizes as compared to the whole (potential anomalies and variations may skew the statistics), they appear to work in the cases in which Males uses them. And after all, they are meant to provide support for his overall argument, not meant to be his overall argument.
Males furthermore describes how many of the media portrayals of youth also blames them for various problems and how certain flaws in youth, such as gullibility or vulnerability are the routes of such issues. He gives an example in which Rolling Stone article  “Death in a Schoolyard” asserts youth are obsessed with violent entertainment and cites that and youth culture as indirect causes of school shootings. The article uses skewed and careless statistics to argue the point, while failing to be diligent and properly consider equally pressing problems of adults.
Each example given by Males in someway represents the view of youth at the time “as not-quite-adults.” In each example youth are represented as something less than adults, with diminished capacity but not beyond saving (concerns about vulnerability to media manipulation, concerns about vulnerability to the internet, concerns about vulnerability to violent entertainment etc). Other examples also show the overlap between past and modern views. For example, in the teenage driving example youth are thought of as dangerous drivers i.e. “youth as a dangerous class.” In general this shows how each temporal view see youth as something separate from adults.
The way the media represents youth, however, in such examples is problematic because of how detrimental they are to the perception of youth and how misguided they are in general. Youth are not-so-much in need of fixing as the way the media represents youth is in need of fixing.