Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - What are the main types of adolescent anomie behavior?

What are the main types of adolescent anomie behavior?

As shown in the figure: 1. Deliberate anomie refers to the anomie behavior in which anomie persons seek the utilitarian interests of individuals or groups by violating educational norms.

2. Value-oriented anomie refers to anomie caused by anomie whose values deviate from the dominant educational concept, trying to discredit or change the dominant educational concept and violating educational norms.

3. Emotional anomie behavior mainly refers to anomie behavior made to meet physiological, psychological or emotional needs. Emotional anomie behavior mainly refers to anomie behavior made to meet physiological, psychological or emotional needs. Although sometimes anomie behavior is "rational" choice, but the purpose of this behavior is to meet the individual's physical and psychological needs, so it is actually an irrational behavior.

Such as underage students killing their parents. Another example is revenge, fighting to satisfy vanity and so on. The same characteristic of * * * is that the purpose of behavior is neither utilitarian nor value-oriented, but individual needs. This behavior can be mainly explained by the anomie theory of psychology.

4. Traditional anomie behavior refers to anomie behavior caused by following traditional customs and violating educational norms without subjective anomie concept.

Social reasons

1, social norms are out of control. In the period of social transformation, the ambiguity of social orientation and the relative weakness of new moral construction have caused the moral anomie of the whole society.

2. Commercialization of culture. The social management control system of the cultural market is out of balance, which leads to the proliferation of counter-mainstream culture out of control. Martial arts novels, pornographic and violent films, and articles spread by bad culture are banned, flooding and poisoning young people in society.

3. The impact of urbanization. Urbanization causes the expansion of social disorganization: that is, the original social control is weakened, alienated interpersonal relationships replace intimate interpersonal relationships, and social norms and morality are lost.

4. Population mobility. In the event of a sudden large-scale population movement, social control is pale and weak, and anti-social behavior is more rampant.

5. Diversified values. Social changes will inevitably bring about great changes in a series of values such as outlook on life, marriage, sex, money and property. The remarkable feature of the change of values is that it is more complex and diverse than the change of material form, which has a more profound impact on the occurrence of anomie behavior.