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The Anthropology of Adolescent Risk-Taking BehavioursUniversité Marc Bloch de Strasbourg Risk-taking behaviours often reflect ambivalent ways of calling for the help of ones close friends and family those who count. It is an ultimate means of finding meaning and a system of values; and it is a sign of the adolescents active resistance and his attempts to find his place in the world again. It contrasts with the far more insidious risk of depression and the radical collapse of meaning. In spite of the suffering it engenders, risk-taking nevertheless has a positive side, fostering independence in adolescents and a search for reference points, it leads to a better self-image and is a means of developing ones identity. It is nonetheless painful in terms of its possible repercussions: injuries, death or addiction. But let us not forget that the suffering is upstream, perpetuated by a complex relation between a society, a family structure and a life history. Paradoxically, for some young people who are suffering, the risk is rather that they will remain immured in their world-weariness, with a potentially radical outcome (i.e. suicide). The turbulence caused by risk-taking behaviours illustrates a determination to be rid of ones suffering and to fight on so that life can, at last, be lived.
Key Words: adolescence anthropology body ordeal personal rite of passage risk-taking suffering
Body & Society, Vol. 10, No. 1,
1-15 (2004) This article has been cited by other articles:
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