Moral Panic Over Youth Violence
YOUTH & SOCIETY / SEPTEMBER 2002 Welch et al. / WILDING MORALPANIC OVER YOUTH VIOLENCE: Wilding and the Manufacture of Menace in the Media MICHAEL WELCH ERIC A. PRICE NANA YANKEY Rutgers University In 1989, while reporting the well-publicized attack on a female jogger in New York City, the media discovered wilding, a newly stylized word used to describe sexual vio- lence committed by a group of urban teens. Sociologically, the term wilding became particularly significant due to its racial connotation, perpetuating a stereotype of young Black (and Latino) males belonging to a dangerous class. This work explores the contours of moral panic over wilding by attending to elements of race, class, and fear of crime, especially as they manifest in the media. The findings contribute to a critical understanding of youth in society by offering an interpretation of wilding, a distinctive form of moral panic that symbolizes not only a threat to society at large but also to a political economy that reproduces racial and social disparities. As a conceptual framework, moral panic has improved our under- standing of the social construction of crime, particularly those forms of lawlessness perceived as being new: for example, mugging (Hall, Critcher, Jefferson, Clarke, & Roberts, 1978), crack babies (Humphries, 1999), crank (i.e., methamphetamine or “speed”) (Jenkins, 1994a), freeway violence (Best, 1991, 1999), and superpredators (Brown- stein, 1996, 2000; also see Aceland, 1995; Glassner, 1999).1 Whereas Jock Youngis credited with the first use of the term in 1971, the idea of moral panic developed rapidly in the work of Stanley Cohen who of- fered its enduring definition.
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