This week we discussed subcultures and
deviance, so I decided to watch a local band practice for their upcoming gig to
try and find out if they were a subculture, and hopefully a deviant one.
The member of the band who let me come
watch their practice a few times and take pictures on a few visits, who I’ll
refer to as H.O. throughout the post, is the electric guitarist. He’s an
artist, and dropped out of high school to pursue his dreams for the last 2 or 3
years. The rest of the members didn’t want to be named, even by initials, but
their professions range from teachers to editors to radio broadcasters, but all
produce some form of art. Three of the members, including H.O., are permanent
members, while the others come in and out depending on their day jobs. They
perform mostly experimental and rock music, and practice in one of their homes.
One aspect of non-material culture I
noticed that really narrowed them down as their own little subculture was the
language they used – they referred to different “sets” they wanted to practice
and had different names for instruments, their positions in the band, the level
of volume they were playing at, and ways of signaling when they were taking a
break. They come from all over the world, so they speak English as their common
language and it was fascinating to see how they adapted their own slang.
Although certain terms were borrowed, this group definitely created many
because they had specific references to the band itself weaved in the language.
I (happily) noted a lot of deviance from
the regional norm in their material and non-material culture. From the
cigarettes and ashtrays scattered around the room, to the unfamiliar looking
bottles next to the mike stands, and even their hipster-style and grunge styles
of clothing. On one particular day, H.O wears a pair of purple skinny jeans and
black sneakers, has an unusually styled goatee and a thick-framed pair of black
glasses on. His band mates are dressed similarly, with the girls in espadrilles
and both males and females in colored blazers and hoodies. The heavily printed
clothes they are wearing are not of a style that originated anywhere in the
Gulf region or even the MENA region – definitely not the norm, and could even be seen as a form of resistance. The substances
they consume and the music they play go hand in hand with the style of clothes
they have adopted, and again seemed to me like signs of deviance, although
maybe not to most, but definitely mark them out from the crowd.
In class we discussed how subcultures are
shaped by globalization and this band is definitely a result of the flow of
culture from an external source and into Qatar, where the band members all
live. The style of clothes and music that they have chosen to consume, as
previously discussed, definitely come from somewhere else. Speaking of
consumption, just as was stated in class, their subculture is based mostly on
just that – purchasing a style from the supermarket of style and creating an identity out of it. Ironically,
they decided to have McDonald’s for dinner after practice, topping of the
globalization sundae.
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