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Dr. Amy C. Wilkins is an
Assistant Professor of Sociology at the
University of Colorado,
Boulder.
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Wannabes, Goths, and Christians: The Boundaries of Sex, Style, and
Status.
(June 2008).
The University of Chicago
Press
On college campuses
and in high school halls, being white means being boring. Since
whiteness is the mainstream, white kids lack a cultural identity
that’s exotic or worth flaunting. To remedy this, countless white
youths across the country are now joining more outré subcultures
like the Black- and Puerto Rican–dominated hip-hop scene, the
glamorously morose goth community, or an evangelical Christian
organization whose members reject campus partying.
Amy C. Wilkins’s intimate ethnography of these three subcultures
reveals a complex tug-of-war between the demands of race, class, and
gender in which transgressing in one realm often means conforming to
expectations in another. Subcultures help young people, especially
women, navigate these connecting territories by offering them
different sexual strategies: wannabes cross racial lines, goths
break taboos by becoming involved with multiple partners, and
Christians forego romance to develop their bond with God. Avoiding
sanctimonious hysteria over youth gone astray, Wilkins meets these
kids on their own terms, and the result is a perceptive and
provocative portrait of the structure of young lives.
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