Contextualizing the mental health of metal youth: A community for social protection, identity, and musical empowerment
Funding Information: This research was supported by a University of South Australia PhD Scholarship to the first author.
Acknowledgements: We would like to thank all the participants for sharing their lives with us, and the two reviewers for very perceptive comments.
Abstract
Metal identities are popularly represented as leading to mental health issues but with flawed evidence. We documented the community contexts around metal and well‐being by talking to young metalheads directly. We engaged in repeated, informal talks with 28 young Australians who strongly identified with metal (aged 18–24 years, 5 females and 23 males), and found that the metal identities and community protected them from mental health problems. Four core themes were found from transcripts: they were all bullied or marginalized through social relationships at school; they enjoyed the impact of metal music and lyrics when angry or ostracized; they felt part of a protective community of metalheads, even though in many cases at this age it was more imagined than real; and embodying metal identities enabled them to keep bullies, detractors, and others at bay, and to find friend groups. By talking repeatedly, directly with young metalheads, it was found that metal identities were helping participants to survive the stress of challenging environments and build strong and sustained identities and communities, thus alleviating any potential mental health issues.
Citing Literature
Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 5
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