1 / 13

Teenage consumption of cleanliness

Teenage consumption of cleanliness. Kirsten Gram-Hanssen Kitchens and bathrooms, 27-28 January 2005 The University of Manchester, UK. Background. One third of water and energy is consumed in the households Teenagers consumes more electricity and water than average adults

mac
Download Presentation

Teenage consumption of cleanliness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Teenage consumption of cleanliness Kirsten Gram-Hanssen Kitchens and bathrooms, 27-28 January 2005 The University of Manchester, UK

  2. Background • One third of water and energy is consumed in the households • Teenagers consumes more electricity and water than average adults • From a environmental point of view teenage consumption of cleanliness is interesting • Teenage years: Where norms and habits are established

  3. Teenager-effect

  4. The study • Qualitative interviews with nine families • Teenagers and parents together • Questions of daily habits of changing clothes and showering • Questions related to how norms are negotiated and established

  5. The presentation • Norms and variations in the habits • Theoretical interpretations: • Habitus as a way of understanding habits • Lifestyle, peer-groups and reflectivity • Hedonism or risk handling • Routines and technology in everyday life consumption • Cultural understandings of clean and unclean

  6. Norms in the habits • No smell of sweat!!! • A bath a day, even though not all do it • Change at least socks and underwear every day • Sports demands more showers and clothes washing • Socks are disgusting, under pants are not mentioned

  7. Variations in the habits “The most clean” • Shower once or twice a day. Change everything every day, including towels: 5 loads/person/week. “We have to wash all the laundry” “The least clean” • Shower once or twice a week. Only change socks and underwear every day: less than 1 load/person/week “If you need to shower every day at least you can make them short”

  8. Theoretical interpretations Bourdieu: Habitus as a way of understanding habits • Pre-conscious and pre-verbal relation between agent and structure • Habitus express and sustain social status and class Teenage cleanliness • Easy to find habits transferred from one generation to next • Difficult to find relations between social classes and cleanliness. • Within or without the norm, that is important

  9. Theoretical interpretations Lifestyle, peer-group and reflectivity • When classes disappear you must create your own identity • Teenagers especially concerned about their peer-group Teenage cleanliness • Strong pressure towards cleanliness among the young “They told me I smelled and then I decided to go home” • Show maturity rather than group belonging “When you grow older you do it every day”

  10. Theoretical interpretations Hedonism or risk handling • Pleasures and daydreams of consumption • Reflectivity in handling global and personal risks Teenage cleanliness • Showering is necessary not fun, and bathing is boring • Environmental concern do not influence level of cleanliness but maybe the length of the bath • Dry skin and allergic reaction as an argument against often bathing

  11. Theoretical interpretations Routines and technology in everyday life consumption • Ordinary or conspicuous consumption • Dependencies between social structure and technology Teenage cleanliness • Routines are also grounded on social norms • Technology analysis more relevant historically

  12. Theoretical interpretations Cultural understandings of clean and unclean • Absolute dirt exists only in the eye of the beholder • Dirt is disorder, matter out of place • Strongest taboos about the orifices of the body Teenage cleanliness • Dirt is primarily from inside the body not outside • Smell of sweat is absolutely not accepted • Clothes washing is not only about sweat but also about order

  13. Conclusions • Smell more that dirt. From inside more than outside • Showering is only about cleanliness whereas clothes washing also is about order • Habitus: how norms is passed on from parents to children • Cleanliness is not about social classes • Strong pressure from peer-group on cleanliness • Not much hedonism, risk handling or self producing • More about basic cultural understanding of hygiene

More Related