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Graffiti: A subculture alive within the legal. A pluralistic study of the regulations within Swedish graffiti and the influences of formal law.

Ericsson, Hjalmar LU (2020) SOLM02 20201
Department of Sociology of Law
Abstract
The world of graffiti is an immense social construct which stretches to every corner of the globe. To many, graffiti may seem to be the simple act of applying paint to a surface, often depicting names or letters. In Sweden, graffiti’s acceptance has gained grounds as of late with the riddance of zero tolerance policies and the opening of several legal walls around the country. However, the legal walls may not have had their intended effect. As graffiti artists seek to challenge the law for sport, excitement and danger, legal walls fail to offer aspects which many writers seek. While graffiti writers challenge formal law, their regard for the stipulations within their own field are rarely crossed. Graffiti offers immense depth both... (More)
The world of graffiti is an immense social construct which stretches to every corner of the globe. To many, graffiti may seem to be the simple act of applying paint to a surface, often depicting names or letters. In Sweden, graffiti’s acceptance has gained grounds as of late with the riddance of zero tolerance policies and the opening of several legal walls around the country. However, the legal walls may not have had their intended effect. As graffiti artists seek to challenge the law for sport, excitement and danger, legal walls fail to offer aspects which many writers seek. While graffiti writers challenge formal law, their regard for the stipulations within their own field are rarely crossed. Graffiti offers immense depth both artistically as well as normatively.
Writers offer a unique perspective into the urban. Using a third eye, writers communicate through tags and murals which offer immense information to those experienced enough to decipher them. As writers take ownership of space, often overlooked due to bureaucracy, they understand the city and formal law with from a practical perspective.
Through ethnography and interviews, this thesis researches three larger cities in Sweden, Malmö, Lund, and Gothenburg. This thesis attempts to analyze the normative stipulations of the graffiti subculture using Moore’s semi-autonomous social fields. It provides a nuanced perspective of the effects of formal law and municipal policy have on the field. Moreover, the thesis attempts to present the normative stipulations while discussing their significance within the field as well as what affects this. Conclusively, the study sheds light unto the value of murals and tags as well how these may be understood from the perspective of writers. The theory of legal pluralism will additionally be developed by discussing the unique properties presented by the graffiti subculture. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Ericsson, Hjalmar LU
supervisor
organization
course
SOLM02 20201
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Graffiti, Subculture, Legal pluralism, Sweden, Ethnography, Semi-autonomous social fields, Norms, Informal law, Gatekapital, Respect, Social capital
language
English
id
9017281
date added to LUP
2020-06-17 09:36:10
date last changed
2020-06-17 09:36:10
@misc{9017281,
  abstract     = {{The world of graffiti is an immense social construct which stretches to every corner of the globe. To many, graffiti may seem to be the simple act of applying paint to a surface, often depicting names or letters. In Sweden, graffiti’s acceptance has gained grounds as of late with the riddance of zero tolerance policies and the opening of several legal walls around the country. However, the legal walls may not have had their intended effect. As graffiti artists seek to challenge the law for sport, excitement and danger, legal walls fail to offer aspects which many writers seek. While graffiti writers challenge formal law, their regard for the stipulations within their own field are rarely crossed. Graffiti offers immense depth both artistically as well as normatively.
Writers offer a unique perspective into the urban. Using a third eye, writers communicate through tags and murals which offer immense information to those experienced enough to decipher them. As writers take ownership of space, often overlooked due to bureaucracy, they understand the city and formal law with from a practical perspective.
Through ethnography and interviews, this thesis researches three larger cities in Sweden, Malmö, Lund, and Gothenburg. This thesis attempts to analyze the normative stipulations of the graffiti subculture using Moore’s semi-autonomous social fields. It provides a nuanced perspective of the effects of formal law and municipal policy have on the field. Moreover, the thesis attempts to present the normative stipulations while discussing their significance within the field as well as what affects this. Conclusively, the study sheds light unto the value of murals and tags as well how these may be understood from the perspective of writers. The theory of legal pluralism will additionally be developed by discussing the unique properties presented by the graffiti subculture.}},
  author       = {{Ericsson, Hjalmar}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Graffiti: A subculture alive within the legal. A pluralistic study of the regulations within Swedish graffiti and the influences of formal law.}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}