Contact Us
linkedin
twitter
  • ABOUT SSL
    • History
    • Contributors
  • DISCIPLINES
    • Anthropology
    • Economics
    • History
    • Philosophy
    • Political Science
    • Social Psychology
    • Sociology
  • SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
    • Evolving Values for a Capitalist World
    • Frontier Issues in Economic Thought
    • Galbraith Series
    • Global History
  • NEWSLETTER

Consuming Children: Reading the Impacts of Tourism in the City of Banaras

  1. Home
  2. >>
  3. Social Psychology
  4. >>
  5. Applied Social Psychology
  6. >>
  7. Children’s Issues
  8. >>
  9. Consuming Children: Reading the...
Consuming Children: Reading the Impacts of Tourism in the City of Banaras
Author(s)Huberman, Jenny
AbstractWhat makes ‘corrupt’ children such efficacious or nodal symbols? How and why is it that certain groups of children take on this signifying function? How do narratives about corrupt children provide people with a way of mediating and articulating more general anxieties about social change or rupture? This article begins to explore these questions by analyzing how people in the city of Banaras, India talked about the corruption and consumption of the lower caste and lower class boys who worked in the informal sector of the foreign tourism industry. Through the invocation of two culturally paradigmatic ‘useless’ figures, the loafer (awaaraa) and the addict (nasheybaaz), people in Banaras not only critiqued these youngsters’ consumptive practices and their new found purchasing power in the bazaar, but they also articulated larger fears about the way that foreign tourism was ‘consuming’ these children.
IssueNo2
Pages161-176
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceChildhood: A Global Journal of Child Research
VolumeNo12
PubDateMay 2005
ISBN_ISSN0907-5682

Applied Social Psychology

  • Aggression, Violence and Anti-Social Behavior
  • Business, Bureaucracy, and Organization
  • Children’s Issues
  • Colonialism, Oppression, and Resistance
  • Community, Ethics, and Society
  • Economics and Psychology
  • Education and Socialization
  • Environment and Sustainability
  • Gender Issues
  • Health and Well-Being
  • Human Rights and Social Justice
  • Nation, State, and Politics
  • Religion and Ideology
  • War, Conflict, and Terrorism


Boston University | ECI | Contact Us

Copyright Notification: The Social Science Library (SSL) is for distribution in a defined set of countries. The complete list may be found here. Free distribution within these countries is encouraged, but copyright law forbids distribution outside of these countries.