Man enough to kill, boy enough to cry: Liminality and irresolvability in Adolescence

Higgins, Kathryn Claire. 2025. Man enough to kill, boy enough to cry: Liminality and irresolvability in Adolescence. European Journal of Cultural Studies, ISSN 1367-5494 [Article] (In Press)

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Abstract or Description

This short article considers the television show Adolescence , using the show’s title as an entry point for analysis and critique. Adolescence is the name we give to the liminal zone between childhood and adulthood. However, the concept of an “adolescence” is conspicuously gendered and racialized; it is a strategic attempt to extend the protections and moral absolutions of childhood that is overwhelmingly reserved for white, male youth. As such, one of its primary functions—both in culture at large and in Adolescence as a cultural representation—is to selectively complicate questions of agency, responsibility, and blame. My analysis proposes that this titular sense of adolescent liminality is mirrored in Adolescence’s overall narrative ambivalence about the causes and conditions of gender-based violence. Ultimately, I find that the show harnesses the “in betweenness” of its adolescent protagonist to divorce violent misogyny from power, dodging important questions about the compounding roles of patriarchy, white supremacy, capitalism, and the digitally networked far-Right.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1177/13675494251367598

Data Access Statement:

Data sharing not applicable to this article as no datasets were generated or analyzed during the current study.

Keywords:

misogyny, gender-based violence, television, believability, youth, far-Right

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Media, Communications and Cultural Studies
Media, Communications and Cultural Studies > Centre for Feminist Research
Media, Communications and Cultural Studies > Centre for the Study of Global Media and Democracy

Dates:

DateEvent
30 July 2025Accepted
31 August 2025Published Online

Item ID:

39483

Date Deposited:

03 Sep 2025 15:19

Last Modified:

03 Sep 2025 15:19

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/39483

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