21 Best Subculture Examples (A to Z List) - Youth & Music! (2024)

21 Best Subculture Examples (A to Z List) - Youth & Music! (1)

Subcultures are cultural groups that represent the marginalized and minority cultures. It’s not often you see them in dominant mass media discourse, and when you see them they’re often shown in stereotypical manners.

Examples of subcultures include the hippies, hipsters, cosplay, hip hop, punks, emos, and goths.

Subcultures are also usually associated with youth and often seen with some degree of suspicion by older people. A subculture may also become the popular culture if it becomes more mainstream, or counterculture if it becomes seen as being oppositional or defiant to the mainstream culture of the day.

Below is an in-exhaustive list of subcultures.

Contents show

Examples of Youth Subcultures

1. Hippies

Hippies were one of the most powerful countercultures of the 20th Century. They started in the mid- 1960s in the Unites States as a youth subculture characterized by free love, utopian socialism, sexual revolution and psychedelic art and music. The movement peaked in the 1969 Summer of Love and subsided by the mid 70s. They were also strongly against the Vietnam war.

2. Hackers

Hackers are a new media subculture built around gaining access to hidden corners of the internet and suppressed online data. Hackers embark on ‘hackathons’ where they work together on multi-hour sprints to develop ways to hack into networks. They exist upon a spectrum of illegal hackers gaining data for nefarious means, through to hackers working for companies or governments to stress test security software.

3. New Age

New age spirituality emerged as a spiritual and religious subculture in the 1970s. It is highly eclectic without a central unifying doctrine. However, it is often characterized by a holistic understanding of divinity (similar to pantheism) and belief in the ability to communicate with angels and the afterlife.

4. Surf Culture

Surf culture existed as a small sub-culture throughout the 20th Century, but boomed in the 1960s in Southern California. It is often associated with a ‘chilled out’ approach to life, love of the surf and sun and 1960s beach music. There are sub-sets of this cultural grouping, such as big wave surfers and ocean environmentalism. A common trope in surf culture is territorialism, with surfers laying claim to certain surf breaks as their own. This culture is also visible in Hawaii and Australia.

5. Ski Bums

Similar to surf culture, ski bum culture is predominantly found in the Alps in Europe and Rockies in North America. This culture is also characterized by a laid-back approach to life, and has its own fashion and lingo (‘gnarly dude’). Ski bums and surfer culture overlap, with the cultures dovetailing between winter and summer months. Some ski bums also follow the snow between the northern and southern hemispheres, chasing the “endless winter”.

6. Hipsters

Hipsters were a sub-culture in the 1940s, but made a resurgence in the early 21st Century. It is characterized by counter-cultural fashion, including wearing clothing and stylings ironically. Full beards, twirled mustaches, big glasses, bicylces and skinny jeans are common. While intended to be counter-cultural, the fashion is derided for its internal consistency and conformism, and was quickly co-opted into the fashion mainstream of the 2010s. The term ‘hipster’ is often pejorative, and rarely used by hipsters themselves.

7. Cosplayers

The portmanteau of ‘costume play’, cosplayers are a sub-cultural group of nerds and geeks who gather in dress up costumes that mimic their favorite comic book, cartoon and film characters. Cosplay events such as Comicon are world-wide annual celebrations of this subculture.

8. Steampunk

Steampunk is associated with art, fashion and literature that is retrofuturistic. The fashion combines Victorian and industrial era iconography such as gears and steam powered machinery with futuristic science fiction. Steampunk films include The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, The Golden Compass and Wild Wild West. Steampunk has significant overlaps with cosplay due to the strong fan dress-up culture.

9. Graffiti Artists

Graffiti subculture is an underground counterculture with eclectic members. It ranges from gangs making their marks on public infrastructure to lay claim to territory, through to legitimized graffiti art commissioned by councils and landowners. Graffiti art can range from simple ‘tags’ spray painted in public spaces as a conquest and sign of rebellion, through to political art such as the famous wall art in Medellin’s Communa 13 in Colombia.

10. LGBTQI

LGBTQI and ‘queer culture’ is a sub-culture characterized by the non-heteronormative sexuality of its members. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, questioning and 2-Spirit sexualities (in Indigenous North American culture) are central to the movement. This subculture has gained significant legitimacy and recognition in law in recent years, and has a significant political sub-set that advocate for the rights of its members. Culturally, many people in this culture congregate in gay and drag clubs, and even have their own rainbow flag as the emblem of the sub-culture’s pride.

11. Skaters

Skaters (skateboarders) are a sub-cultural group who gather around love of the sport of skateboarding. It grew throughout the second half of the 20th Century and was particularly strong in the 1980s. There are two overlapping sub-groups: vert and street. Street skaters embrace skating in public urban areas, using the street landscape to do tricks. Vert skaters started with skating in empty pools, with Tony Hawk revolutionizing vert by launching off the lip of pools to gain ‘air’. Vert is now commonly associated with skating on halfpipes.

12. Beat Generation

The beat generation was a literary movement of the 1950s that widely influenced subsequent culture and music in the 20th Century. Known as the beatniks, they created beat poetry and the free-flowing literary style evident in Allan Ginsberg’s poemHowl and Jack Kerouac’s book On the Road. Common themes in their work were pseudo-intellectualism and existentialism. Moral panic surrounded their sympathy for communism, with the term ‘beatnik’ being a portmanteau of ‘beat generation’ and ‘Sputnik’, a reference to the Soviet Union’s satellite.

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Examples of Music Subcultures

13. Goths

Goths are a music subculture that originated in the UK in the 1980s. Its group members embrace post-punk Gothic rock from bands like Bauhaus and Joy Division. Their fashion includes all-black clothing, dark eyeliner, pale face blush, black nail polish, and androgynous dress.

14. Punks

Punk rock was one of the most influential youth music subcultures in the 20th Century. Born in the 1970s, the original wave of punk rock only lasted a few years, but has influenced many subsequent subcultures hoping to embrace the passion and creativity of punk rock. Punk bands like The Clash, The Sex Pistols and The Ramones introduced music with a rapid-fire driven beat. The subculture was strongly anti-corporatism, against ‘selling out’ to music labels, and even embraced anarchism. Punks wore leather jackets, Dr. Martens boots and spiked colorful mohawks. Subsequent waves of punk rock never matched the original wave, but gave rise to several worldwide supergroups including Blink 182 and Green Day.

15. Mods

Mods were a British sub-culture in the 1950s and 1960s who garnered their name because they coalesced around modern jazz music. Their fashion was dominantly characterized by tailor-made suits. They also embraced Vespa motorized scooters into the culture. They were made famous for their violent clashes with rockers in the UK, leading youth subculture theorist Stanley Cohen to theorize the concept of ‘Moral Panic’, explaining society’s exaggerated fear of youth subcultures. A break-off working class group of Mods eventually created the Skinheads subculture.

16. Skinheads

Skinheads were a working-class British subculture of the 1960s who fraternized with the middle-class Mods but split off to create their own sub-culture in opposition to both the middle-class values of the Mods and free love mentality of the hippies. They primarily defined themselves by their embrace of British working-class culture. While originally apolitical and mostly united around social class groupings as well as and ska, R&B and Reggae music, some skinheads broke off to create far-right neo Nazi groupings. Many skinheads reject this political association.

17. Grunge

Grunge was a west-coast subculture which emerged mainly out of Seattle in the late 1980s and early 1990s (it is often referred to as Seattle Sound). Their music was a hybrid of metal and punk. Key bands include Nirvana, Pearl Jam and the Stone Temple Pilots. Their music is characterized by guitar distortion, and the undisputed anthem of grunge music is the song Smells Like Teen Spirit, which encompassed the quintessential grunge mood of the early 1990s. Critics of grunge claim it is emblematic of the narcissism of privileged and bored white middle-class youth during an era of American prosperity.

18. Hip Hop

Hip-hop is a subculture that emerged in the mid-1970s in The Bronx, NY. Its members are primarily Black, Caribbean and Latino American youth. Key activities include disc-jockeying, breakdancing and rapping, but many members also identify with the graffiti artist subculture. The ‘golden age of hip hop’ spanned 1987 – 1996, and saw the rise of key artists from the genre including Public Enemy, NWA, Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G. Much of the music explores Black poverty, gang affiliation and police violence against people of color in areas of the US such as the Bronx and Crompton.

19. Drum and Bass

D’n’B is a musical subculture that grew in the 1990s with a strong focus on electronic music, fast back beats and heavy bass. Influenced by Jamaican dub music and reggae, D’n’B was very popular in Northern Europe and is celebrated for leading the way in electronic music, strongly influencing subsequent music styles like EDM and progressive house music.

20. Emos

Emos were a music subculture of the early 2000s known for melancholic music designed to empathize with teen angst. Shortened from ’emotional music’, Emos gathered inspiration from pop punk and gothic rock music. They’re identifiable by their all-black outfits, black died mid-length hair swept over their faces, skinny jeans, and gauge earrings. Central bands from the movement include Simple Plan, Jimmy Eat World, My Chemical Romance and Weezer.

21. K-Pop

Shortened from ‘Korean Pop’, K-Pop was a subculture that became a predominant cultural identification among Korean youth, although its influence is global. Upbeat pop and hiphop music, its most globally recognizable song is Gangnam Style. Fashion from this sub-culture includes sporty street wear, bandanas and hip-hop outfits.

Related: A List of Taboos in Different Cultures

FAQs

What are some Ethnic Subculture Examples?

Ethnic subcultures are subcultures that are specific to a minority ethnic group within a society.

Three ethnic subcultures are:

  • Reggae (Caribbean subculture)
  • Hip-Hop (African-American subculture)
  • Bollywood (Indian diaspora subculture)

An example of an ethnic subculture is Bollywood culture in the USA. While it’s not dominant, Bollywood movies are still celebrated, watched, and even produced by the Indian diaspora in the USA.

Similarly, rap and hip-hop are ethnic subcultures because they’re primarily celebrated by African-Americans. While there are some white rappers and hip-hop artists, the subculture was created and continues to be dominantly celebrated by African-Americans.

Reggae music is another example of an ethnic subculture. Reggae is predominantly enjoyed by people of Caribbean descent, although its music has also been popularized by major artists like Bob Marley.

What are some American Subculture Examples?

America has countless subcultures due to the size of the melting pot nation. Some examples of American subcultures include hip-hop (African-American), Hippies (Oregon / California), Redneck (Southern), and Grunge (Seattle Sound).

What’s the Difference Between Subculture and Counterculture?

Countercultures are a specific type of culture defined in opposition or as an alternative to dominant ways of life. Counter-cultural groups often seek broad social change in ways that subcultures do not.

See here for specific examples of countercultures.

Throughout the last 50 – 70 years, subcultures and countercultures have also been looked upon with suspicion.

Societies often experience “moral panic” when a sub- or counter- culture becomes prominent. Adults often fear their children will be tempted to join their ranks, while the subcultures themselves often challenge dominant ideas of youth, masculinity, femininity, social class and political ideology.

What’s the Difference Between Subculture and Pop Culture?

Pop culture is the dominant culture in a society designed to appeal to the masses. Subcultures are cultures that exist within a society but are not dominant. Examples of pop culture include 1990s sit-coms, pop punk music of the 1990s, popular fashion trends, and Top 40 music styles. These were the dominant cultural tropes of their times.

Read Next: Culture vs Society (What’s the Difference?)

Conclusion – List of Subcultures

This list of subcultures is just a small example of the endless potential subcultures list one could create. I have attempted to present here a few highly influential subcultures of the past 100 years. It is interesting to note that each subculture is a renewal and re-imagining of previous subcultures, where new surges of creative energy and fusions creates a new outlet for personal expression. Each subculture is an expression of generational concerns – cultural, social, economic and political – and often emerges out of the contexts of the time.

21 Best Subculture Examples (A to Z List) - Youth & Music! (2)

Chris Drew (PhD)

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Dr. Chris Drew is the founder of the Helpful Professor. He holds a PhD in education and has published over 20 articles in scholarly journals. He is the former editor of the Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education.

21 Best Subculture Examples (A to Z List) - Youth & Music! (2024)

FAQs

21 Best Subculture Examples (A to Z List) - Youth & Music!? ›

For example, 21st-century subcultures include goth, cyberculture, emo, gamer, hip-hop and hipster. Subcultures can be face-to-face groups or communities. They can also be online groups or communities – for example, on social media or gaming platforms.

What are examples of youth subcultures? ›

For example, 21st-century subcultures include goth, cyberculture, emo, gamer, hip-hop and hipster. Subcultures can be face-to-face groups or communities. They can also be online groups or communities – for example, on social media or gaming platforms.

What are the best examples of subculture? ›

There are numerous groups of people that could be classified as subcultures, for example: hippies, antigun groups, high school jocks, environmental activists, people in the furry community, people in the cosplay community;,punks, goths, and many more (Lennon, Johnson, & Rudd, 2017, 292).

What is an example of subculture music? ›

One of the most well known subcultures created by musical genres is punk. The punk subculture was formed in the US and the UK in the mid 1970s. The punk subculture, is of course, centered around punk rock music. The music and the subculture are known for anti-establishment ideals and belief in independent freedoms.

What are the 3 main subcultures? ›

Subcultures include groups that have cultural patterns that set apart some segment of society. Cloward and Ohlin argued that there are three different types of deviant subcultures that young people might enter into: criminal subcultures, conflict subcultures and retreatist subcultures.

What are 5 subcultures? ›

Examples of subcultures include the hippies, hipsters, cosplay, hip hop, punks, emos, and goths. What is this? Subcultures are also usually associated with youth and often seen with some degree of suspicion by older people.

What are American subcultures? ›

Subcultures exist within the dominant culture of a society. In America, some examples of subcultures are hippies, punk rockers, beatniks, and hipsters.

What are the subcultures of Gen Z? ›

Gen Z subcultures

The subcultures in this category are streetwear gamers and gamer girls – think a mishmash of MTV, esports, fashion and music cultures, whereas the gamer girls are fueled by inclusion and lifestyle. The groups have a median age between 20 and 21.

What is a subculture with example? ›

A subculture is a group of people within a larger culture, such as a country, who have something in common. They might share religious or political beliefs or be science fiction fans, for example.

What is your subculture? ›

A subculture is a group of people within a cultural society that differentiates itself from the conservative and standard values to which it belongs, often maintaining some of its founding principles. Subcultures develop their own norms and values regarding cultural, political, and sexual matters.

Is hip hop music a subculture? ›

Hip hop is a subculture and an art movement that emerged from the Bronx in New York City during the early 1970s. Its development reflected the negative effects of post-industrial decline, political discourse, and a rapidly changing economy.

What are some music cultures? ›

International ethnic groups
  • Afro-American (also Afro-Latin and Afro-Caribbean)
  • Andean.
  • Arabic.
  • Assyrian.
  • Basque.
  • Bedouin.
  • Berber.
  • Celtic.

How is TikTok a subculture? ›

Subcultures on TikTok refer to groups of users who share a common interest, style, or aesthetics and create content around it. Some examples of TikTok subcultures include: cosplayers, dancers, and creators making comedic skits. These subcultures often have their own hashtags, in-jokes, trends, and challenges.

What are the four subcultures? ›

In 1966 Clark and Trow published their seminal work that defined student subcultures, not types of students. They classified students by commonalities and differences, resulting in four typologies: collegiate, vocational, academic, and nonconformist.

Is Religion a subculture? ›

Religious groups are a common subculture in society—one that has overwhelming influence on their followers. Every religion stipulates for its members what should be regarded as good or bad behavior in terms of what to eat, where to visit, what to wear and so forth.

What is a unique subculture? ›

A subculture is a group within a culture that differs from the general consensus. They have a unique set of beliefs and values that don't necessarily align with the wider culture. Explore some subculture examples, from beatniks to bodybuilders, and get a clear idea of what small groups of nonconformists look like.

What are two types of subculture? ›

There are two types of subcultures-monolayer subculture and suspension subculture.

Is gamer a subculture? ›

Video game culture or gaming culture is a worldwide new media subculture formed by video game hobbyists.

What is a sport subculture? ›

A sport group whose members' behaviour is contrary to some of the norms or values of the wider society. For example, some regard boxing as a deviant sport subculture because of the intent to inflict physical harm on the opponent. Compare avocational sport subculture, occupational sport culture.

What is subculture in popular culture? ›

Subcultures Are a Minority Culture Within a Broader Culture

Like-minded people who often feel left out of the dominant culture sometimes come together and create subcultures. A subculture will have symbols that differentiate themselves from the dominant culture. These symbols support the subculture's identity.

What were the subcultures in the 2000s? ›

Feeling nostalgic during economic distress, Gen Z found solace in the 90s and early 2000s. They revived four subcultures: Y2K, indie sleaze, old money, and twee.

What were the subcultures in the 20th century? ›

Hippies, mods, punks, glam rockers, metals, goths, ravers, rappers - they all had their popularity peaks with shared views on the world. Their opinions were what was bringing them together, while the music they listened to and the way they dressed distinguished them from others.

What were the youth subcultures in the 70s? ›

1970s. In the 1970s, the hippie, mod and rocker subcultures were in a process of transformation, which temporarily took on the name of freaks (openly embracing the image of strangeness).

What are some subcultures on TikTok? ›

Some examples of TikTok subcultures include Cottagecore, Dark Academia, FitTok, and of course, BookTok. These subcultures are highly specific, thus creating a sense of belonging for those that resonate with the niche.

What is the subculture of millennials? ›

By this definition, Millennials are a subculture.

While they share many of the myths, customs and rituals of the larger culture, they have language, preferences and customs that are distinct to their generation. They have a unique set of reference groups and opinion leaders.

What is religious subculture? ›

Religious subculture refers to a group of people who have similar religious beliefs. People's religious affiliation may also influence to a great extent their consumption patterns. Religious rituals and beliefs may dictate the use of certain products and might discourage the consumption of others.

What is age subculture? ›

Subculture Based on Age

Subcultures may also be based on the age differences of people living in the same country and belonging to the same main culture. It is likely that those who belong to the teen age group will behave quite differently than those of middle age or elderly.

Is fashion a subculture? ›

Fashion is not a hom*ogenous umbrella of clothes, shoes, and accessories. Instead, it has initiated many trends, which congregate into subcultures. Fashion subcultures are popular ways of dressing created through cultural influences like music, art or epochs.

What is my youth subculture? ›

A youth subculture is a youth-based subculture with distinct styles, behaviors, and interests. Youth subcultures offer participants an identity outside of that ascribed by social institutions such as family, work, home and school.

What is a subculture in high school? ›

A school subculture can be described as a group of pupils who share similar behaviours and views on school. They are often a response to how pupils feel they have been labelled by teachers and can be both positive and negative.

Do youth subcultures still exist? ›

While subcultures still exist, they are less defined and considerably more atomised and interchangeable than in the past.

What is a rap subculture? ›

The hip hop subculture can be characterized by people who love rap and truly identify with the message of racial struggles and poverty that is conveyed through hip hop music. The subculture's four defining activities are disc-jockeying, breakdancing, graffiti art, and rapping.

Is goth a music subculture? ›

Goth is a music-based subculture that began in the United Kingdom during the early 1980s. It was developed by fans of Gothic rock, an offshoot of the post-punk music genre.

Is metal a music based subculture? ›

The heavy metal subculture can be characterized by love of heavy metal music, disinterest in materiality, and opposition to authority. In addition, people in this subculture tend to focus on individualism and resent the limited options for growth in the working middle class.

Why is music a culture? ›

Music Is a Highway of Shared Experiences

Music is an essential element of culture. Sharing music from one culture to another gives people an insight into another way of life. This is even more crucial during times of conflict when other methods of interaction are rendered impractical.

What are the 6 main types of music? ›

Genres of popular music include country, musicals, jazz, rhythm and blues, rock, and rap.

How is music a culture? ›

In a cultural context, music is an intrinsic part of gatherings, festivals, and belief systems. Sound and rhythm patterns give a particular perspective into an individual's opinions of the culture, subcultures and social issues of the times.

Are fans a subculture? ›

A fandom is a subculture composed of fans characterized by a feeling of empathy and camaraderie with others who share a common interest.

What is a subculture in social media? ›

Subculture can be understood as that social group within a group with a lifestyle that is different from the culture of the group as a whole. The members of these groups have different tastes of dressing, music and lifestyle.

Is football a subculture? ›

Football fanaticism is one of the most popular subcultures in the world.

Is a subculture a culture? ›

Subcultures are generally groups that are perceived to deviate from the normative standards of the dominant culture, as this is variously defined according to age, sexuality, and taste in economic, racial, and gendered terms.

Is anime a subculture? ›

Japanese subcultures like manga, anime, and games are very popular - not only in Japan but also overseas. Recently these things have been recognized as representative of Japanese culture, alongside the country's more traditional ones.

Is gender a subculture? ›

Sexuality and gender identity-based cultures are subcultures and communities composed of people who have shared experiences, backgrounds, or interests due to common sexual or gender identities.

What are 5 examples of culture? ›

Customs, laws, dress, architectural style, social standards, and traditions are all examples of cultural elements.

Is ethnicity a subculture? ›

One major proposition is that ethnic groups, as subcultures, constitute differentiable consumer segments. That is, ethnic groups may represent substantially distinct patterns of consumption characteristics.

What is a strong subculture? ›

A good subculture co-exists with the dominant culture and creates a sense of purpose, belonging, and cohesion within employees, making it good for the organization as a whole.

What are subcultures in an positive? ›

A positive subculture benefits internal coherence, rather than working against the company culture. It co-exists with the dominant culture and promotes cohesion and a sense of belonging. Another way subcultures benefit the overall company is by promoting good relationships with peers.

Is being an athlete a subculture? ›

Athletics clearly is a broad arena of youth subculture identity, and a variety of subgroups have coalesced around formal and informal sports teams and around peers who adopt an athletic lifestyle. Good athletes usually are admired, and exceptional athletes often are treated as superstars.

What are the four student subcultures examples? ›

They classified students by commonalities and differences, resulting in four typologies: collegiate, vocational, academic, and nonconformist.

What is meant by youth subculture? ›

Youth subculture is a youth-based subculture with distinct styles, behaviors, and interests. Youth subcultures offer participants an identity outside of that ascribed by social institutions such as family, work, home and school.

What are Gen Z subcultures? ›

Gen Z subcultures

The subcultures in this category are streetwear gamers and gamer girls – think a mishmash of MTV, esports, fashion and music cultures, whereas the gamer girls are fueled by inclusion and lifestyle. The groups have a median age between 20 and 21.

What are the characteristics of youth sub culture? ›

Examples of common types of subcultures include:
  • music-based, for example, hip hop or heavy metal.
  • religious-based, for example, Christian or Muslim.
  • gender and sexual identity, for example, LGBT or intersex.
  • fandoms, for example, Beliebers (fans of Justin Bieber) or Twihards (fans of the Twilight series).

What is a subculture give an example? ›

A subculture is a group of people within a larger culture, such as a country, who have something in common. They might share religious or political beliefs or be science fiction fans, for example.

What are examples of culture and subculture? ›

A subculture may surround a hobby, art movement, music scene, fashion sense, philosophy or lifestyle. Culture surrounds pervasive social groups such as a nation, community, religion, ethnicity or social class. People may choose to join a culture but they are also inevitably born into a culture or multiple cultures.

What is a TikTok subculture? ›

Subcultures on TikTok refer to groups of users who share a common interest, style, or aesthetics and create content around it. Some examples of TikTok subcultures include: cosplayers, dancers, and creators making comedic skits. These subcultures often have their own hashtags, in-jokes, trends, and challenges.

What is a high school subculture? ›

School subcultures are smaller groups of students who share attitudes to the rules, values, and norms of school and form their behaviour accordingly. School subcultures are often based on gender, ethnicity, and social class.

Is age group a subculture? ›

Age and gender are two of the most frequently used subcultural bases for segmentation in consumer research (cf.

What are Gen Z known to be? ›

Pew Research recently defined Gen Z as anyone born 1997 onwards. Gen Z grew up with technology, the internet, and social media, which sometimes causes them to be stereotyped as tech-addicted, anti-social, or “social justice warriors.”

What is a subculture of the 2000s? ›

The scene subculture is a youth subculture that emerged during the early 2000s in the United States from the pre-existing emo subculture. The subculture became popular with adolescents from the mid-2000s to early 2010s. Members of the scene subculture are referred to as scene kids, trendies, or scenesters.

What is an example of Gen Z? ›

Generation Z comprises people born between 1996 and 2010. This generation's identity has been shaped by the digital age, climate anxiety, a shifting financial landscape, and COVID-19. Gen Z is currently the second-youngest generation, with millennials before and Generation Alpha after.

What influences youth culture? ›

An emphasis on clothes, popular music, sports, vocabulary, and dating typically sets youth apart from other age groups. Within youth culture, there are many constantly changing youth subcultures, which may be divided based on race, ethnicity, economic status, public appearance, or a variety of other factors.

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