Contenu du sommaire : Paniques et croisades morales

Revue Recherches Sociologiques et Anthropologiques Mir@bel
Numéro vol. 43, no 1, 2012
Titre du numéro Paniques et croisades morales
Texte intégral en ligne Accessible sur l'internet
  • Présentation. Entre paniques et croisades : sociologues et claims-makers - Jean-Michel Chaumont p. 1-13 accès libre
  • La campagne britannique des video nasties. Paniques, claims-making, risques et politique - Martin Barker p. 15-34 accès libre avec résumé avec résumé en anglais
    Au début des années '80, une puissante campagne vit le jour en Grande Breta­gne ; elle entendait contrôler la production et la circulation de vidéos pré-enre­gistrées. Je reconsidère ici la campagne à la lumière des débats qui en ont suivi. Trois paradigmes majeurs sont apparus pour comprendre des campagnes telles que celle-ci : la panique morale, le claims-making et la “gestion du risque”. Ces trois approches sont interrogées via un réexamen des foyers des campagnes anti video nasties pour trois questions irrésolues. Les analystes doivent-ils simplement veiller à décrire les paniques médiatiques ou doivent-ils également prendre position, publiquement ? Devons nous voir les paniques médiatiques comme des expressions naturellement générées de tensions ou comme des tentatives délibérées d'augmenter le niveau de la réaction émotionnelle ? De quelle manière abordons-nous le statut des discours publics des claim makers et leurs rapports avec leurs intentions “privées”. A partir de cette évocation, l'arti­cle propose quelques pistes : la nécessité de chercher à identifier les contradictions entre les motivations réelles et déclarées, entre les discours publics et privés ; la nécessité d'être vigilant vis à vis de la gestion cynique du discours public en vue d'assurer le niveau de panique approprié ; la nécessité pour ce genre de campagnes de ne pas être confrontées à certaines questions critiques que les activistes ont tendance à poser.
    In the early 1980s, a powerful campaign erupted in the United Kingdom which sought to control the production and circulation of pre-recorded videos. In this essay I reconsider the campaign in the light of subsequent debates. Three major paradigms have emerged for understanding campaigns such as this : moral panics ; claims-making ; and risk-management. These three approaches are tested via a re-examination of the video nasties campaign centres, for three unresolved issues : 1. whether analysts should simply seek to describe media scares, or need also to take sides, publicly ; 2. whether we should see media scares as naturally-occurring expressions of tensions, or as purposive attempts to increase levels of emotional response ; 3. how we address the status of claims-makers' public discourses, and their relations with their “private” intentions. From this account, the essays draws several lessons for researchers : (1) the need to research conflicts between declared and actual motives, private and public rhe­torics ; (2) the need to be alert to the cynical management of public presentation, in order to ensure appropriate level of panic ; and (3) the dependence of such campaigns on avoiding the kinds of critical questions which activists are inclined to ask.
  • “Are We Insane ?”. The “Video Nasty” Moral Panic - Julian Petley p. 35-57 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    The events which led to the imposition of state video censorship in the UK in 1984 are frequently described as constituting a moral panic. However, with the exception of Critcher (2003) these events have never actually been analysed in the light of moral panic theory, and this article attempts this task in much greater detail than Critcher, whose concerns go beyond this particular panic about videos. The article shows how concerns about the new medium of home video were first expressed in the press in May 1982, and details the first prosecutions of videos under the Obscene Publications Act in August of that year. The arti­cle explains the role of moral entrepreneurs such as Mary Whitehouse and politicians of all parties in helping to create this particular panic, but its main focus is on the role played by the national press in amplifying the panic and creating a signification spiral in which the alleged threat posed by the so-called “video nasties” was constantly escalated, as well as converged with other apparent threats to the social order. The result was an increasingly strident campaign for firm legislative measures to be taken. The article argues that the events which led to the passing of the Video Recordings Act (1984) need to be understood as a process of communication involving a deviance-defining elite of politicians, moral entrepreneurs and censorious newspapers, a process from which the public itself was largely absent, constant press invocations of “public opinion” notwithstanding.
  • Screen Savers. Case Histories of Social Reaction to Mass Media, Children and Violence - Chas Critcher p. 59-78 accès libre avec résumé
    Historically the mass media have often been blamed for causing violent behaviour by children and young people. Two case studies of new media, film and video games, are compared in terms of their emergence, reactions to them and outcomes of the debate, mainly in the USA and Britain. Both cases are used to test the sociological model of moral panic which is found to be of limited appli­cation. It needs to be supplemented by two other concepts, those of media panic and moral regulation. Only then can be grasped the complexities of continuities and changes in these historical debates, at the heart of which remains the figure of the eternally vulnerable child.
  • La construction sociale de médias dangereux pour la jeunesse. Des paniques morales aux quasi-théories - Anne-Laure Wibrin p. 79-96 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    Much of the research done on the incrimination of medias as danger sources have used the conceptual framework of moral panic. In this article, we will show that the concept was misused to indicate what amounted to moral crusading and that the confusion between “panic” and “crusade” contributes to misunderstanding the problem. Based on two empirical examples (the French campaign against graphic novels from the 1930's to the 1950's and the British campaign against comic books shortly after world war II) we will see how pressure groups militated for years for laws prohibiting, censuring, controlling or regulating those objects. Subsequently, despite the confusion between “panic” and “crusade”, we will consider these invaluable research works for three reasons : they contribute nuances in studying the effects of medias, they establish the recurrence of accusations against various medias and they focus on the stakes latent in those accusations. Finally, we will insist on the importance of studying the recurrence of discourses for sociology.
  • Lamenting the “Decline of the Family Meal” as a Moral Panic ? Methodological Reflections - Anne Murcott p. 97-118 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    This essay considers the relevance of the idea of moral panic to a frequently repeated lament for the supposed “decline of the family meal”. It proceeds by first recapitulating earlier discussion (Murcott, 1997) of the supposition, second by bringing that discussion up to date. Noteworthy is the durability of that lament and of the range of practitioners and activists who report and repeat it. Although suitable data sets are in short supply, some social scientific research has relatively recently been devoted to examining the historical accuracy of the decline of the family meal, and find at best equivocal support for its disappear­ance. Despite the inadequacy or absence of evidence for any decline, the lament persists, revealing the lament as a possible exaggeration. The paper's final section reviews the relevance of moral panic in relation to the persisting lament in respect of the seven features of the notion presented by Garland (2008). On this basis, the article concludes that, despite claims by Jackson et al. (2009) of the relevance of moral panic to the lament, it is only partly so.
  • Des paniques morales spontanées ? Le cas de la “rumeur d'Orléans” - Jean-Michel Chaumont p. 119-137 accès libre avec résumé avec résumé en anglais
    Analysée par Edgar Morin et son équipe dans l'ouvrage du même nom, la célè­bre rumeur d'Orléans (1969) est donnée par Goode et Ben-Yehuda (2009) pour l'exemple par excellence d'une panique morale spontanée. A partir de sources négligées par Morin, nous montrons qu'il a omis de prendre en considération l'impact potentiel probable de campagnes de lutte contre la traite des femmes menées depuis des décennies par quantité d'associations tant au niveau national qu'international. Nous en concluons que si cet exemple unique (chez Goode et Ben-Yehuda) de panique morale vraiment spontanée doit plutôt être appré­hendé comme le résultat involontaire d'une croisade morale, il y a lieu de pen­ser qu'aucune panique morale ne peut survenir sans qu'une croisade morale ne la précède. Nous plaidons donc pour inclure les moral panics studies dans l'en­semble plus large des recherches consacrées aux croisades morales. De facto, c'est ce que font déjà les nombreux analystes de paniques morales qui prennent pour objet privilégié les discours alarmistes des entrepreneurs de morale plutôt que les réactions supposément paniquées de segments significatifs des popu­lations auxquelles ils s'adressent. Il s'agirait en somme d'aligner les objectifs déclarés sur les pratiques effectives.
    Analysed by Edgar Morin and his team in the work of the same name, the celebrated rumour of Orleans (1969) is cited by Goode and Ben-Yehuda (2009) as the example par excellence of a spontaneous moral panic. Using sources neglected by Morin, we show that he failed to take into account the probable potential impact of campaigns against the trafficking of women carried out for decades by many associations, on both a national and international level. Hence we conclude that if this unique example (for Goode and Ben-Yehuda) of truly spontaneous moral panic should rather be understood as the unintended result of a moral crusade, we are led to think that no moral panic can occur without a moral crusade preceding it. So we feel that moral panic studies should be included within the broader field of research devoted to moral crusades. De facto, that is what many moral panic analysts are already doing, taking the alarmist talk of the moral entrepreneurs as their target object rather than the supposed panicky reactions of significant segments of the populations they are addressed to. Finally, it is a matter of aligning declared goals with effective practices.
  • Article isolé

    • Le paradoxe des politiques d'intégration par le sport. Une enquête ethnographique comparative dans deux communes bruxelloises - Olivier Schmitz p. 139-157 accès libre avec résumé avec résumé en anglais
      Le sport occupe une place centrale dans les politiques d'intégration mises en place par les pouvoirs publics communaux en raison des vertus socialisantes qu'on lui accorde. Mais l'efficacité de ces politi­ques est en grande partie conditionnée par l'idéologie et les fins poursuivies par les décideurs et acteurs locaux qui, selon les contextes politiques, modèlent en grande partie les animations offertes aux caté­gories sociales dominées. En partant d'une recherche comparative réalisée selon une démarche ethno­graphique, et ayant pour objet la comparaison des politiques d'animation sportive dans deux communes de la région Bruxelloise dont les populations sont fortement contrastées selon les critères socioéco­nomiques courants, cet article montre comment des animations se voulant “socialisantes” et “intégran­tes” produisent des effets contraires et renforcent les processus de différenciation et de mise à l'écart des populations les plus démunies en capital culturel.
      Sport occupies a central place in the integration policies put in place by the districts' public authorities due to the socializing virtues attributed to it. But the effectiveness of those policies is substantially conditioned by the ideology and ends pursued by the decision makers and local actors who, according to the political contexts, mainly model the activities offered to suit the dominated social categories. Based on comparative research carried out using an ethnographical procedure, and having as its object a comparison of the sport policies in two districts of the Brussels area whose populations contrast strongly according to current socio-economic criteria, this article shows how sporting activities seeking to foster “socialisation” and “integration” produce contrary effects and reinforce the processes differentiating and distancing the populations most lacking in cultural capital.
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