The First Moral Panic, London 1744
Moral panics : the social construction of deviance / Erich Goode and Nachman Ben-Yehuda
Revisiting moral panics / edited by Viviene E. Cree, Gary Clapton and Mark Smith
We believe the children : a moral panic in the 1980s / Richard Beck
Youth, popular culture and moral panics : penny gaffs to gangsta-rap, 1830-1996 / John Springhall
Moral panics are instances of mass fear based on the false or exaggerated perception that some cultural behavior or group of people is dangerously deviant and poses a threat to society's values and interests.
Such panics are fostered by mass media and exploited by self-appointed moralists and politicians.
First coined by Jock Young (1971) and, later, Stanley Cohen (1972) when he studied the public reaction to youths called “mods and rockers” in Brighton, England during the 1960's.
Salem Witch Trials, 1692-93
McCarthyism, 1950s
Satanic Panic, 1980s-90s
QAnon, 2017-present
Moral panics arise when distorted mass media campaigns are used to create fear, reinforce stereotypes and exacerbate preexisting divisions in the world, often based on race, ethnicity and social class.
Many social problems have been the basis of distorted mass media campaigns. Do you remember any of these moral panics?
Concern
Volatility
Disproportionality
Consensus
Hostility
-Goode and Ben Yehuda, 1994
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