Frederic
M. Thrasher argues ganging is recognized by young age as “gang instinct.”
However, Thrasher claims other writers have consider ganging a form of “social
instinct” believing that youth behavior develop at a young age. A division
between “gang instinct” and “social instinct” was characterized as a relation
to individuals claiming instinct is a condition not a social relation. While he stresses arguments of “gang
instinct,” this article displays a developmental stage of mind and body.
Thrasher examines the notable argument that “gang instinct” is false evidence
to youth gang life.
Thrasher
disputes the gang instinct as a natural characteristic of our social order and
a formation of small groups. For instance, children developed their own groups
in their living conditions and their surrounding environments. Small or big
neighborhoods children find their way to develop their new cliques. The
majority of gangs develop from spontaneous playgroups. Young boys come together
to contribute in the pleasure, crowd, in the goal of forming a group. This
gives an idea that play-group acquire a form of organization and a standing
that leaders form. It does not become a formation of gang until opposition or
enemies are presented. This shows that youth groups become “gangs” with
opposition to other peer groups and adult suspicion or hostility. Thrasher
gives an example of parents and neighbors step in and try to break up the
play-group in suspicion of gang formation.
However, this only forms more conflict and greater acts of criminality.
Professor Morrill discusses that most youth affiliations do not evolve into
gangs but into clubs. Clubs referring to adult supervision comparable to
Thrasher model of “Aunt Sarah’s Bunch” allowing boys to be free at her house.
The boys had no formal organization nor anyone was considered the leader.
Instead there was a group-consciousness that follows a form of structure.
Another
point Thrasher explains is that many writers have consider the argument of
“social instinct” a form of ganging indicating that human behavior is the main
structure of forming a gang. For instance, a group of boys find themselves
contributing to the idea of gang because they have similar interest or same age
group who spend most of their time together and form the club. This creates a situation complex as discussed
in lecture is the idea getting actors and understanding their social
organization in school or family. This relates to the idea point of “social
instinct” showing a behavioral understanding to become a gang.
According to “As Study of Social
Psychology” by L.L. Bernard studies the nature of instinct and argues the idea
“social instinct” a procedure of “not concrete facts.” He describes that
instinct represents only biological and a mental process. Instead Bernard presents the field of
sociology to distinct his scientific study of discipline towards the
contribution of environment and the control of “social instinct.” One can
assume that Thrasher study demonstrates behavioral characterization of ganging
and that “social instinct” is no longer the bases of human behavior.
-Marisol Lopez
Thrasher, M.
Frederic. The Gang A Study of 1,313 Gangs
in Chicago. Chicago: University Press, 1927. Print.
“As
Study of Social Psychology” by L.L. Bernard
www.brocku.ca/MeadProject/Kantor/Kantor_1924_5.htmt
www.brocku.ca/MeadProject/Kantor/Kantor_1924_5.htmt
Thank you Marisol for a very in-depth discussion of "gang-instinct" versus "social-instinct." You do a good job of defining those terms and putting them into context with the situation-complex. This post made me think about who are the youth that we define as having a "social-instinct" versus those with a "gang-instinct." Though Thrasher discusses that many youth who are in the same group develop into gangs and Professor Morrill claims they form into clubs, I can't help but think about why there is a distinction. Is this a way for us to begin criminalizing poor youth who cannot join baseball, basketball or other sports teams simply because they are "loitering?" You don't necessarily have to answer this, just some food for thought as we read about gang and social instinct.
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