Posts Tagged ‘emo culture’

Reactions to the Emo Style and Subculture

Emo can be considered a very controversial subculture. That is why over the years there have been quite a lot of different reactions to emo, whether it involves the style, the music, the stereotypes, and the culture itself.

For example, did you know that there has been a law proposed in the Russian Duma (the Federal Assembly of Russia’s lower house) that aims to regulate web sites about the emo subculture, as well as to prohibit the emo style in schools as well as in government facilities. The rationale here is that officials fear the subculture promotes negative behavior—being anti-social, being depressed, or even promoting suicidal tendencies.

Among the biggest backlashes that emo has faced is that it allegedly glamorizes self-inflicted pain and suicide. From music lyrics to the MySpace profile pictures of self-proclaimed emos, there is a lot of depictions of this sort of thing. That is why there have been many concerned with the kind of attitudes and sensibilities promoted by the subculture.

In general, there seem to be many who have negative perspectives toward emos and what they represent. This is especially true when it comes to emo imagery. An example is the predominance of black in visuals relating to the emo culture, images that are also sometimes infused with red for blood.  There are also other graphic images that show bloody wrists, self-mutilation, and objects like teddy bears hanging themselves.

Today, we have the kinds of stereotypes that link such imagery to the people who tag themselves with the emo label. When some people see a guy with side-swept bangs, they go, “Oh, he’s definitely an emo. Probably slashes his wrists in the bathroom at night.” In a way, this can be a negative perception about people, especially those people who simply emulate emo fashion instead of emo sensibilities.

Of course, supporters of the subculture will be quick to defend it. Many really are not into slashing their wrists, nor do they have suicidal tendencies. Many simply gravitate towards emo because of how it is geared towards a particular type of expression. Many are drawn into the subculture because of its treatment of emotional devastation, a necessary release for many advocates of emo.

Aside from those issues on subculture, there have also been other issues that are related to emo’s apparent gender bias, especially when it comes to the emo music scene. Emo music has generally featured the pangs of a male with a bone to pick against a woman. While it can be argued that both genders appreciate the songs regardless of the subject, many contest that there have been many emo songs with anti-woman sentiments in them.

Clearly, there is a wide variety of reactions to the subculture we call emo. It takes a lot of hits regardless of what aspect we look at—the appearance, the style, the music, and the actions commonly associated to the culture. There is an undeniable social stigma attached with the label, and it will continue to be controversial for many years to come.

What about you? What do you think about these reactions to the emo way of life? Are they justified, or is there a lack of understanding surrounding emo? Comment away, and be heard.

The Emo Subculture and Everyone Else

With every generation of young people, the number of subcultures the media and, by extension, the public fixates its attention upon. There were the hippies who had risen during the 60s with their “love and peace” ethos. There were the kids who got on to rock music through groups like KISS or Black Sabbath. Our generation has the emo kids.

What do they all have in common? Bad press from the media or every other subculture.

Like some fads, the emo or “emotional” subculture was born from the musical style known as emotional hardcore. It can be seen in the lyrics of certain songs as the major theme is melodic musicianship and expressive, often confessional, lyrics. As the style evolved, as music does, it began taking cues from indie rock and pop punk until it broke into the mainstream around the 2000s.

So with the breaking out of mascara among guys, so came the stereotypes of the whole fashion. Both genders wear skinny jeans in bright colors and tight t-shirts, either black or bearing the logos of emo bands like Dashboard Confessional or My Chemical Romance. Popular hairstyles, there’s long side-swept bangs, sometimes covering either both eyes or one eye. Accessories they favor are black horn-rimmed glasses, studded belts and black wristbands, while they prefer the Converse or Vans brand of shoes.

As the style spread to younger teenagers, the style has become darker, with long bangs and emphasis on the color black replacing the other colors. The stereotype included being sensitive, shy and angst-ridden. Not bad things usually, but the emo stereotype had also grown to include depression, self-injury and suicide.

Also criticized was the androcentrism, the practice of putting men and the masculine point of view as the center of the world. Many of the songs are about a guy’s frustration and anger at the women who dumped them as well as portraying women as helpless flighty beings. Emotional devastation is the lynchpin to the style.

Then there’s how emo kids or groups are received by their peers. One look at the hair, the clothes or even the music they listen to automatically brands them an androgynous loner bent on self-harm. There are the “juvenial” reactions, a word used by Kevin Lynman, founder of the Warped Tour about how emo bands were received by the other artists. Then, there are the violent reactions. In Mexico, Time Magazine had reported certain groups attacking a trio of emo kids in 2008, leaving the victims bloody and sobbing while the assailants laughed and cheered as they ran away. Then there was the Russian government in Duma vowing to regulate emo websites and emo fashions in schools and government buildings, for fears that the trend promotes anti-social behaviour, depression, social withdrawal and even suicide. Even bands try to distance themselves from the label. Who else can forget about the 10 girls in Dammamn who were arrested for alleged un-Islamic behavior and dress this 2010?

For most people, the humane thing would be to leave them alone in their little worlds. But remember the movies or TV shows where the jocks beat up the geeks (Glee fans, stand up)? Same thing, but on an international scale.