Abstract
This paper, details from an educational perspective the reasons graffitists give for their involvement in graffiti. Data gathered
from interviews, web-blogs and newspaper reports were analysed within the grounded theory tradition allowing the core category
of, addicted to the risk, recognition and respect that the graffiti lifestyle provides to emerge. In this regard, adolescent graffiti-writers contend that sustained involvement in graffiti-writing provides a
rush experience, which over time becomes addictive as it rewards them with a non-conforming social identity, recognitional
status, and the highly-prized graffiti-writer reputation. However, as they move out of adolescence into early adulthood, the
addictive rushes previously gained from engagement in illegal high-risk acts of graffiti tagging, they claim, morphs into
an obsessive desire for obtaining community respect. Thus, the outcome of the study suggests that the issue of graffiti-proliferation
goes beyond the confines of educational/criminological research and enters the sphere of mental health, opening up different
treatment options for recidivist graffiti-writers.
from interviews, web-blogs and newspaper reports were analysed within the grounded theory tradition allowing the core category
of, addicted to the risk, recognition and respect that the graffiti lifestyle provides to emerge. In this regard, adolescent graffiti-writers contend that sustained involvement in graffiti-writing provides a
rush experience, which over time becomes addictive as it rewards them with a non-conforming social identity, recognitional
status, and the highly-prized graffiti-writer reputation. However, as they move out of adolescence into early adulthood, the
addictive rushes previously gained from engagement in illegal high-risk acts of graffiti tagging, they claim, morphs into
an obsessive desire for obtaining community respect. Thus, the outcome of the study suggests that the issue of graffiti-proliferation
goes beyond the confines of educational/criminological research and enters the sphere of mental health, opening up different
treatment options for recidivist graffiti-writers.
- Content Type Journal Article
- DOI 10.1007/s11469-010-9301-6
- Authors
- Myra Frances Taylor, Centre for Attention & Related Disorders, Graduate School of Education, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
- Journal International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction
- Online ISSN 1557-1882
- Print ISSN 1557-1874