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Objects after Adolescence: Teen Film without Transition in Spring Breakers and The Bling Ring

Version 2 2024-06-13, 11:30
Version 1 2019-02-27, 11:14
chapter
posted on 2024-06-13, 11:30 authored by EK Stapleton
The generic conventions of teen films include coming-of-age or discovery-of-identity narratives that reinforce adolescence as a period of transition, with social conformity, in one guise or another, as their natural consequence. The production of a stable sense of identity, or agency, is key to these narratives, primarily borne of navigations of homosocial and heterosexual relationships. The history of teen film extends to the introduction of the concept of adolescence in the 1950s into American and, by extension, western culture (Driscoll, 2011, p. 9). From Rebel Without a Cause (Nicholas Ray, 1955) to Puberty Blues (Bruce Beresford, 1981) to Thirteen (Catherine Hardwicke, 2003), narrative cinema has attempted to capture the intensive and transitory experience of adolescence.

History

Chapter number

10

Pagination

183-199

ISBN-13

9781137505484

ISBN-10

1137505486

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1.1 Book chapter

Extent

13

Editor/Contributor(s)

Dowd G, Rulyova N

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Place of publication

London, Eng.

Title of book

Genre trajectories: identifying, mapping, projecting

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