Literature DB >> 12824123

From Alice Cooper to Marilyn Manson: the significance of adolescent antiheroes.

Jeff Q Bostic1, Steve Schlozman, Caroly Pataki, Carel Ristuccia, Eugene V Beresin, Andrés Martin.   

Abstract

Every generation has icons attractive to adolescents and equally repugnant to adults. This article examines antihero characteristics, their appeal to adolescents, and how adults can respond to adolescents enamored of antiheroes. The stage personas of antiheroes champion rejection of the mainstream, assail adult constraints and expectations, explore frightening topics, and ultimately fulfill the adolescent fantasy of surviving alienation and emerging victorious over parents and peers. But antihero idolization also tests the adult's defenses. Adults, fearing loss of control and rejection by the adolescent, sometimes resort to primitive defenses mismatched to the developmental needs of the adolescent. Adults, as much as the adolescents, benefit from examining their individual reactions to the antihero and how their current relationship can accommodate this intrusion. The antihero phenomenon presents adults with an opportunity to model ways to think through that which is uncomfortable and to navigate together the adolescent's developmentally normative separation efforts.

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12824123     DOI: 10.1176/appi.ap.27.1.54

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Psychiatry        ISSN: 1042-9670


  1 in total

1.  Conflict of interest reporting by authors involved in promotion of off-label drug use: an analysis of journal disclosures.

Authors:  Aaron S Kesselheim; Bo Wang; David M Studdert; Jerry Avorn
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2012-08-07       Impact factor: 11.069

  1 in total

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