First blog post!
I don't really have a clear idea about what my posts are
going to focus on - I think I'll just go with the flow and write about whatever
I'm thinking about at any given time. I'm also not sure how often I'll be
posting. With three huge final year essays and a dissertation to complete, plus
a tonne of other commitments (oh helloooo job search) this year is shaping up
to be pretty hectic. But I'm going to try and use this as a kind of catharsis.
So without further ado:
We could all do more
to address the 'lad' culture - so why don't we?
The short answer to this, I guess, is that if we don't we
will be ridiculed for being boring and ostracised from our peers.
By its very nature, the lad culture bullies and belittles
those who are different. And 'different' here means anyone who doesn't fit in
to the boisterous, macho male stereotype.
The question that bothers me is, do these 'lads' actually
exist, or is this just a subversive ideal that hundreds of thousands of
adolescents are trying to measure up to? Do these guys actually feel like they
are being true to themselves, or is it just something they perform in order to
seek acceptance from their social group?
The Urban Dictionary definition for 'lad' reads:
A lad is a
male who specialises in creating and distributing exquisite banter. Though most
lads are youngish (late teens and early twenties) age is not a defining
characteristic and you will find both young lads and old lads. Some special
skills of lads include, but are not limited to the following:
- Binning
Pints
- Exposing genitalia and getting naked in public places
- Throwing up after copious alcohol consumption
- Spousal Abuse
- Getting kicked out of pubs/nightclubs for being overly offensive
- Exposing genitalia and getting naked in public places
- Throwing up after copious alcohol consumption
- Spousal Abuse
- Getting kicked out of pubs/nightclubs for being overly offensive
Excelling in
all areas will earn a lad the title of "top lad". There is no higher
praise that can be bequeathed upon an individual.
"That guy just saw off a whole bottle of Vodka
then partyboyed that bird, what a lad!"
Most people
enjoy a drink, and sometimes it's funny when your friends make prats out of
themselves... But surely mutual abuse and humiliation (masked as 'banter') is
not the aim, or indeed the product, of a functional relationship. I've been
party to many groups of 'lads', and it seems to me that the unrelenting insults
are a defence rather than an offence. In this perverted culture, you have to
put others down or be attacked yourself.
The misogyny
that is encouraged in these circles stems from the same root cause: the need to
feel superior ('go make me a sandwich'). The crude and demeaning way they talk
about the women they have had sex with is a warped means of gaining status. Furthermore,
joking about rape is the way that boys are being taught (through popular
culture, tv and the internet) to confirm and validate their own masculinity.
And this
isn't just a problem in the most extreme groups. It's an epidemic which
normalises abuse - of women, homosexuals, children. You only have to look at Sickapedia
to see what I'm talking about.
I'm not saying
that I don't find myself laughing at these jokes. I recently brought the box set
of The Inbetweeners, because, quite frankly, I find it hillarious. But I also
ask myself why? When you stand back and really think about it, these things
aren't funny - we've just been conditioned for so long that we don't know
what's acceptable anymore.
I couldn't
isolate one cause, but I do know that a lot of the problems that society faces
today are interlinked: trolling/cyber bullying, the resurgence of misogyny,
over-sexualisation, teenage suicide...
In my opinion, there hasn't been nearly enough research into
this emerging culture. It has its roots in so many different things - not least
the virtual anonymity of the internet - and it affects many people's day to day
lives. Joking about rape/paedophilia/homophobia is not only insensitive - it trivialises
and normalises it. And that's no laughing matter.
http://www.theladbible.com/
http://www.sickipedia.org/jokes
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/10207231/Woman-who-campaigned-for-Jane-Austen-bank-note-receives-Twitter-death-threats.html
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/oct/22/great-british-bake-off-ruby-dandoh
http://www.nus.org.uk/cy/nus-calls-for-summit-on-lad-culture/
No comments:
Post a Comment