海角大神

Teen books: twice as obscene as video games?

A study conducted by a Brigham Young professor found that obscenity is rife in some teen novels and that characters who swear tend to be portrayed as more attractive and popular.

鈥淧erfect鈥 by Sara Shepard and 鈥淭weak: Growing up on Methamphetamine鈥 by Nic Sheff were two of the books included in a Brigham Young University study on obscenity in young adult novels.

Sure, you know teen and tween movies and video games are rife with potty-mouthed characters, violence, and explicit sex scenes. But did you know adolescent bestsellers are, too?

According to by Brigham Young University social sciences professor Sarah Coyne, young adult bestsellers are so rife with cursing they actually have twice the rate of cursing of video games. What鈥檚 more, the characters in adolescent fiction that swear are typically portrayed as wealthier, more attractive, and more popular than their clean-mouthed counterparts.

In , published this month in 鈥淢ass Communication and Society,鈥 Coyne analyzed the use of profanity in 40 books from an adolescent bestseller list. She found 35 of the 40 books, or about 88 percent, contained profanity (compared to 34 percent in video games). And on average, Coyne found teen novels contain 38 instances of profanity, which she said, translates to almost seven instances of profanity per hour spent reading.

If your teen or tween鈥檚 nightstand is piled high with or Twilight novels, fear not: Coyne found those popular series tame, with little to no swearing. But 鈥Pretty Little Liars,鈥 the dramatic Sara Shepard series featuring four young girls, is above-average with 80 鈥渙bjectionable鈥 words in a 298-page book, 鈥淧erfect.鈥 The worst offender on her list was 鈥淭weak: Growing up on Methamphetamine.鈥

The fact that potty-mouthed characters are portrayed as superior is particularly concerning, Coyne said in a BYU statement.

鈥淔rom a social learning standpoint, this is really important because adolescents are more likely to imitate media characters portrayed in positive, desirable ways,鈥 Coyne said.

And while video games or movies come with warnings and age controls, Young Adult books do not have indicators of maturity content, she adds.

鈥淯nlike almost every other type of media, there are no content warnings or any indication if there is extremely high levels of profanity in adolescent novels,鈥 Coyne said. 鈥淧arents should talk with their children about the books they are reading.鈥

Not everyone is surprised 鈥 or alarmed 鈥 by the findings.

鈥淟et鈥檚 just be happy that kids are reading at all and not get our panties all twisted up about the fact that the books they鈥檙e choosing to consume accurately reflect how their friends actually talk,鈥 wrote Cassie Murdoch of .

What do you think? Is Coyne鈥檚 study needlessly alarmist? Or should this be a wake-up call to parents?

Husna Haq is a Monitor correspondent.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Teen books: twice as obscene as video games?
Read this article in
/Books/chapter-and-verse/2012/0522/Teen-books-twice-as-obscene-as-video-games
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe