Abstract

Youth movements were a popular phenomenon in the beginning of the twentieth century. They were popular with youth itself, as well as with adults who wanted to organize and mobilize youth. In this article I will give an explanation of this popularity.Instead of the common approach, I will not emphasize the differences between the several movements, but the similarities, such as time and place of origin, youth idealism and the characteristic style and culture. Such an approach enables us to overcome the common view of youth movements as counter cultural movements. In my view, the youth movements emerged from the youth care of the nineteenth century. Important factors were the depression of traditional youth community life, the “invention” of adolescence and the educational practices in secondary schools, the growing concern for youth delinquency and the rise of the youth associations. The youth movements can be seen as the result of a mingling between the (youth) association system and elements of tradition...

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