The final weeks of February not only contains
the promise of warmer weather, but it also brings about the inevitable countdown carried out by nearly every college student for one special week of relaxation: spring break.
Spring break is the mid-semester hiatus that every student
waits for with eagerness and expectation, and it is often the light at the end
of the tunnel after a week of stress with midterms and papers. But spring break,
in both popular culture and the media, has become a phenomenon in and of
itself, one that is very risqué and sometimes dangerous. Movies and television
have portrayed spring break as the annual propagation of debauchery, lewd
behavior, and not to mention the abuse of alcohol, all located on the sunny
beaches of Florida or other coastal towns. Of course, not every student does
these things, but someone unfamiliar to American culture would probably think
the majority of them participate in the insanity of the stereotypical spring
break based on how pervasive the stereotypes are in our culture. One such recent
example is the film “Spring Breakers” which depict the antics of a few girls
who decide that decide early on that spring break will fulfill all their
desires that their bleak life at school cannot and will do anything for this
short vacation.
The idea of the typical spring break and why it occurs can
be better analyzed using the concepts put forth by our theorists we have
studied so far, like Sigmund Freud, Max Gluckman, and A.R. Radcliffe-Brown. Freud
offers psychological ideas which could explain why the event occurs, and
Gluckman offers some societal reasoning stemming from Durkheim’s concept of
solidarity and his own idea of rebellion. A.R. Radcliffe-Brown, as a structural-functionalist,
offers some insight into the function and purpose of the event through the lens
of its benefit to society.
Freud, based on his theories about the human psyche, would
probably attribute the culture of spring break as that of the id running
rampant among a group of people. Expressing the id is a way for spring break
participants to express these wild desires in a place where others are doing
the same, and where these wild impulses are not frowned upon. Also, the excuse
of being intoxicated help to make the wild actions of the masses more
acceptable. Freud would probably go further to say that the constraints of
college and its stressful atmosphere manifest themselves in this week of
catharsis which takes the form of spring break. Once this break is over,
individuals retreat back into the world of the superego and rule-following
behavior.
The idea of catharsis and release in the analysis of an
event is also important in the work of Max Gluckman. In his work, Gluckman
discussed the ritual of rebellion, and how the rituals provide a way of liberating
social discontent in an acceptable fashion. Spring break, being an annual event
where normal societal rules are broken (as well as actual laws on some occasion),
would definitely constitute one of these rituals of rebellion. Gluckman
discusses how these rituals do not become actual revolutions, and as a result strengthen
social authority. Similarly, spring break is not an actual rebellion, as it is
only a week out of the year, and afterwards students return to their
universities and regular lives which are places of order. The media reports on
the negatives and extremes of this event, such as deaths and abuse of alcohol,
which cause people to place a higher value on order and the rules of society. Ultimately,
spring break being a ritual of rebellion increases solidarity among the
population overall, as it shows the benefit of societal order.
Deviating from the idea of catharsis and rebellion are the
theories of Radcliffe-Brown. Radcliffe-Brown, a structural-functionalist, would
try determine what the purpose of spring break is to society, unlike Freud and
Gluckman who focus on the purpose for individuals. People participating in this
affair often travel to coastal places and vacation areas where tourists provide
the main source of monetary profit. In this way, spring break as a reliable
annual event benefits society because it introduces money from students all
over the country to these places which rely on tourism to sustain themselves.
This benefits society overall since it helps communities thrive. Although this economic
aspect of spring break is not often discussed, it is nonetheless an important
result of the event.
These few theorists mentioned by no means have all the
answers to why spring break is conducted. Ultimately, it is most likely a mix
of many factors. But we must always wonder why this stereotypical vision of spring
break exists and why it is propagated. I have no doubt that as the semester
goes on we will discover more people who have theories that apply to this cultural
phenomenon. Until then, I ask somewhat rhetorically, what will YOU be doing
from March 8th to the 15th and more importantly, why?
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