A single Youth Culture Youth Culture and Youth Subculture have been subject to research since the early 1930's. Sure thing today is that there is no unique youth culture, but there is a passage culture of different young people. It can not be said that the 1990s is the same as the 1960s, 1970s, or 80s. Sociologists have advocated a number of reasons for this, for example, today's style has increased more, media has had a big impact on us, and each individual's disposable income is more popular.
For today's South African youth, the organization of culture and youth play a very important role. The study confirmed that people can not really talk about a single holistic "youth culture". In the era of rapid social change, the stereotypical double-cultural opposition such as urban / rural type, elite type / popular type, modern / traditional type are losing their respective values. For example, some studies point out that the status of young people in "traditional" conservative societies has changed with urbanization and westernization. In order to develop policies on their diversity that not only correspond to their diversity and change and development but also help to guide it actually, to recognize the new and more confidently the position of young people Is important. The current process of social change and democratization essential to promote common culture and values; things to start from school
Early studies of youth culture were mainly produced by people interested in functional sociology and used young people as a single cultural form. In explaining the development of culture, they used the concept of abnormality - the lack of social norms -. Talcott Parsons believes that when we move from family and corresponding values to another field with different values from different values, we will experience 'analogical situation'. Because Marxist theory focuses on rank and class scores rather than young people, I explain some diversity. It is the whole. Stewart Hall and Tony Jefferson explained youth subculture as a symbolic or ritual attempt to resist the power of bourgeois hegemony by adopting consciously threatening behavior. On the contrary, Marxists at the Faculty of Social Sciences in Frankfurt believe that youth culture is essentially consumerism and an integral part of the capitalist 's divide and governance strategy.