Introduction
In the twenty-first century, modern, market-based economies and their accompanying individualistic and extrinsically oriented value structures have spread throughout much of the world.1 While it is perhaps a truism to state that children and young people’s development will be shaped by the world in which they live, albeit in complex and diverse ways, relatively little consideration has been given to relationships between neoliberal capitalist cultures and young people’s mental health and well-being. As documented by cultural psychologist Carl Ratner over a decade ago, capitalism and its variants had appeared in only 14 article abstracts in all major psychology journals combined in the preceding 119 years.2 He concluded that, “nobody is talking about the fact that nobody is talking about capitalism.” In the decade since Ratner’s observations, there has been a growing literature on the impact of neoliberal market economies on human development in the social sciences.3 However, this literature is only starting to emerge in relation to mental health and well-being,4 and typically does not consider links between young people’s mental health and their strivings to find a place in the highly competitive and achievement-oriented neoliberal capitalist cultures in which they live.
Neoliberal capitalism promotes self-interest and interpersonal styles rooted in competition, a strong desire for financial success, high levels of consumption, and belief in the necessity of economic growth.5 It has been associated with the rise of extrinsic values such as individualism, materialism, and status-seeking, which have intensified over the last 40–50 years in consumer economies.6 The dominance of extrinsic values is consequential: when young people show disproportionate extrinsic relative to intrinsic values there is increased risk for mental health problems such as anxiety and depression, and poorer well-being.7
Critically, as Ratner pointed out, capitalism disguises itself as a culture, with its emphasis on individualism and private ownership of resources obscuring its own social organization and influences on human development. For example, in neoliberal capitalist cultures, young people’s development and well-being occurs in differentiated and competitive social environments where opportunities and access to resources are unequally distributed,8 and often stratified by region, race, ethnicity, gender, ability, and socio-economic differences.9 These foundational inequalities are believed to be an inescapable part of capitalist social and cultural relations, leading to uneven life chances for many young people with consequences for their mental health and well-being.10 Even when these social inequalities are brought to people’s attention, empirical studies suggest that individuals who live in neoliberal capitalist cultures believe that its market-based system is inherently fair, legitimate, and just.11
In this text we understand performance as the performance of self in everyday life and consider the effects of neoliberal capitalism on such performance. Our analysis is focused on relationships between young people’s self-making in complex modern market cultures and their mental health and well-being. In particular, we seek to understand the growing presence of internalizing difficulties (i.e., emotional problems tied to the self) in many young people’s lives, namely experiences of anxiety, depression, loneliness, and low self-worth.12 Epidemiological studies suggest that internalizing symptoms are relatively stable during childhood and increase during adolescence and young adulthood.13 Internalizing difficulties create a substantial burden of suffering for young people, with a prevalence of 32% of anxiety disorders and 14.3% mood disorders in youth from 13 to 18 years old.14 There is growing documentation and concern that internalizing problems in young people are on the rise,15 especially in neoliberal capitalist countries.16 In a relatively recent population-based study of Swedish youth spanning from 1981 to 2014, Blomqvist and colleagues (2019) report that both those identifying as girls and those identifying as boys showed increasing internalizing problems while conduct problems decreased.17 This aligns with interdisciplinary research such as the theoretical work of Byung-Chul Han, which aptly describes our shift from a Foucauldian disciplinary society predicated on prohibitions and commandments that can lead to delinquency and deviance for those who fail to fit in, to an achievement-society predicated on an excess of positivity that results in labels of “depressives and losers” for those that cannot compete and produce.18 These converging findings, documenting increasing emotional difficulties and theorizing the pressures of living in the highly competitive and achievement-oriented environments, prompt us to consider links between the social organization of neoliberal capitalism and internalizing difficulties in young people.
Self-Making in Highly Competitive and Achievement-Oriented Forms of Life
To confront this trend of increasing internalizing problems, Blomqvist and colleagues suggest that we need a deeper understanding of the impact of the major societal changes of the past three decades on young people’s mental health and well-being.19 We suggest that the commanding influence of extrinsic values in a highly competitive socio-economic context are linked to the reconfiguration of young people’s psychosocial and interpersonal processes, the use of technology, and the ambient socio-ecological conditions that inform their development and their self-making. Today, young people’s sense of self is developing in neoliberal capitalist cultures where accession to adulthood roles are delayed,20 greater emphasis is placed on their ability to access higher education and/or job skills training,21 families are smaller and subject to greater structural instability,22 and the entertainment, fashion, and sporting industries have become important socializing influences.23 Young people’s prolific use of technology, exemplified by social media, develops individualistic behaviors, attitudes, values, and self-focused aspirations such as garnering social recognition and fame.24 Overall, the diminished normative structures and shifting socialization influences toward extrinsic values and metrics, exacerbated by greater social inequality and uncertainty in the labor market, makes self-making more complex and the passage to a functional adulthood more precarious.25
Young people’s self-making in the highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life is responsive to socio-ecologies of self-optimization. The notion of a form of life is adopted from the literature on affordances and embodied cognition, which is defined as “a set of behavioral patterns, relatively robust on socio-cultural and biographical time scales, which is characteristic of a group or population.”26 Young people’s growing participation in unending status competitions and the pursuit of social success are integral to highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life.27 Self-optimization may be defined as the acquisition and development of the skills, means, and resources necessary to enhance the probability of attaining social status and success.28 In the socio-ecologies of neoliberal capitalism, young people become invested in their self-optimization and in the positional aspects of self-making, fostering their ability to establish their social standing and to develop socially and economically productive lives in highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life.
With the dominance of modern market cultures globally, population studies reveal parental shifts toward greater investment in fewer children so parents can optimize their children’s embodied capital (e.g., physical health, intelligence, knowledge and skills, social status, and networks) for them to compete successfully and achieve status.29 The development of young people’s self-optimization extends beyond parental investment to include a broader socio-ecology that is designed to invest in young people’s embodied capital and therefore equip them to become productive and successful adults.30 These broader social investments in young people’s embodied capital are made by non-kin adults such as teachers, coaches, and counsellors, and social institutions such as school and governmental provisions in areas like education and healthcare that vary within and across Western nations.31
Young people’s ability to benefit from socio-ecologies that support young people’s self-optimization are crucial. That is, young people’s capacity to participate in educational and extracurricular activities, to thrive in technologically mediated environments, and to obtain necessary parental and social support and resources are highly consequential in their pursuit of the skills and knowledge necessary for them to meet environmental demands and maximize their life chances in neoliberal capitalist cultures. As noted above, however, the possibility for young people to self-optimize is often constrained by their limited access to critical material and psychological resources in the unequally distributed political economy of neoliberal capitalist nations.
Young People’s Mental Health in Highly Competitive and Achievement-Oriented Forms of Life
Beyond outlining the socio-cultural and socio-economic threads that help us understand the impact of neoliberal capitalism on young people’s mental health, we take Blomqvist and colleagues’ suggestions for a cultural analysis one step further. We propose that we need to understand the overarching ideology and socio-cultural forms and practices of neoliberal capitalism that inform young people’s self-making and mental health. In neoliberal capitalism, young people are pressured to self-commodify and to serve and outperform their peers in the marketplaces that define their world. While we realize that there is substantial empirical evidence into the host of individual, parent-child, familial, and social factors that place young people at risk for internalizing mental health problems,32 we adopt a cultural interdisciplinary analysis that is conceptual and borrows from research as necessary.
To inform our interdisciplinary cultural diagnosis of the rising rates of internalizing problems in young people, we draw on Dutch psychiatrist Jan Hendrik van den Berg’s sociosis.33 Van den Berg claims that vulnerabilities to certain mental health disorders and issues are tied to the relational and socio-cultural contexts of a given historical period. For example, he argues that Sigmund Freud’s insistence that individual neuroses were all related to sexual concerns cannot be divorced from the repressed sexuality and rigorous social mores of the second half of nineteenth-century Western Europe. The subject of Freud’s time was continually confronting the subconscious cultural discourses of sexuality that were foreclosed during the Victorian era in Western Europe.
We can look at differing conceptions of sexuality and their proposed links to mental health as an example of the relationship between social organization and mental health disorders. Freud details a conception of Victorian sexuality grounded in repressed desires located in a deep intrapsychic realm, hidden from the subject and discoverable only in a relationship with an analyst. However, sexuality in neoliberal capitalism is visible, commodified, and mostly discoverable by competitive peer audiences participating in highly competitive modern market economies. In contrast to Freud’s time, we see in young people’s self-making a prominent focus on physical attractiveness, sexuality, and appearance ideals, which have become metrics of social success and ciphers of social recognition and popularity. These changing social attitudes toward sexuality help mark a shift in the type of mental health disorders most common to a given society and how we come to understand them.
Following van den Berg’s insight that mental health disorders are the result of the relationships and organization of society rather than neuroses responding to repressed sexuality, we hypothesize that young people’s increasing proclivities towards internalizing disorders are, in significant ways, responses to the intensifying cultural demands and pressures of neoliberal capitalism. Young people’s mental health in this politico-economic system can be fruitfully understood by locating the development of their internalizing problems in a period of intensifying global competition34 and to outperforming one’s peers to secure material and psychological resources.35 The result is that young people are coerced into unending pursuit of social status and success co-extensive with highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life.
Young people’s injunction toward self-optimization in their pursuit of extrinsically grounded social status and success is evolutionarily based, stage-salient, and culturally promoted.36 Occurring during adolescence and early adulthood, young people turn toward high-status peers and figures of cultural prestige, often from popular culture, to guide them in their quest to find an optimal place in highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life. Unfortunately, these high-status attractors embody desirable but also curated and manufactured versions of extrinsic metrics of success largely unattainable by most young people. These metrics—physical attractiveness, high academic and extracurricular achievements, and displayed material success—have been termed market-driven criteria (MDC).37 These status and identity-enhancing MDC have become integrated into social systems and function symbolically as individuals develop in complex market-based societies. For example, young people engage in status and identity-enhancing signaling of the MDC in competitive cultural environments such as on social media or in everyday interactions with their peers and others (e.g., young people posting acceptance letters from prestigious American colleges to signal elevated status).
Under intensifying competitive cultural pressures to develop optimal self-narratives of status, success, and self-image, young people may be prone to self-objectification, defining themselves from the outside-in, commensurate with extrinsic, quantifiable metrics (i.e., MDC). In turn, this objectified sense of self is often accompanied by judgmental peer social comparisons with adverse consequences for young people’s mental health and well-being in offline and online contexts,38 most likely via perceptions of subordinate status and accompanying internalizing symptoms.39 In the longer term, young people are left with limited and largely prescribed resources to help them develop a more accurate and positive self-image and subjectivity that incorporates awareness of their own growth and struggles (i.e., internal self-comparisons over time), and to accurately discover what they have to offer the world to meet environmental demands (i.e., more rounded self-objectification), in the hope of eventually fulfilling their intrinsic needs and living satisfying lives.
Qualitative accounts from young people themselves, and rigorous quantitative research, document unrelenting cultural pressures on young people to self-optimize in both their academic and extracurricular pursuits in highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life.
These research studies indicate that the criteria and performances required of young people are moving toward very unhelpful and potentially harmful extremes. In qualitative studies of young people’s experience of high achieving schools in Australia and highly competitive equestrian training programs in Sweden, adolescents’ personal accounts describe competitive pressures to display identities encapsulated by the terms “super girl” and “super equestrian.”40 The super girl pursues entrance into an elite college as her ticket to elevated status and future wealth, while the super equestrian signals the most desirable online identity, namely a rider who is attractive, wears the “right clothes,” is successful, and “acts professionally.” These personal accounts from young people in Australia and Sweden correspond with broader linear increases in young adults’ reports of culturally prescribed perfectionism (i.e., perceived strong social pressures and expectations to be perfect) from 1989 to 2016 found in the neoliberal economies of Canada, the US, and the UK.41 We hypothesize that striking rises in socially prescribed perfectionism are likely related to the elevations in symptoms of anxiety, depression, and suicidality seen in these countries. Similar to the notion of highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life advanced here, young people’s internalizing problems are linked to rising pre-occupations with competition and status-attainment in the industrialized world.
Notwithstanding these concerning developments, we underline that capitalism’s impact on young people’s lives does not only result in negative effects. We are strongly influenced by Stiegler’s elaboration of the notion of pharmakon in capitalism.42 That is, young people’s self-making in neoliberal capitalism provides both opportunities and adversities, advantages and disadvantages, that cannot be separated from one another, as pharmaka can be both poison and cure. As a broad stroke, capitalism has led to great prosperity since the Second World War and has been of substantial benefit to well-being, providing levels of personal and political freedom, as well as infrastructure, health, and social provisions unheard of throughout most of human history.43 The centrality of status and identity-enhancement in neoliberal capitalism is highly appealing, allowing for constant innovation and incorporation of an ever-widening range of status distinctions and potential identities. Under certain conditions and for some people, capitalism accommodates growing and diverse skill sets to meet societal demands. Evolutionary sociologist John Hammond describes how neoliberal capitalism elaborates an appealing status inflation that has become part of market societies.44 For example, in academia, faculty have a growing series of metrics to signal their academic status and worth to themselves, their employers, and academic peers: publications, publications in high versus low impact journals, the international profile of their publications, holding grants varying in monetary worth, as well as citations, h-index, i-index, etc. Thus, the growing population has fueled the expansion and variegation of status and identity distinctions, accommodating an increasing number of individuals and groups. Whether it is the power of the advertising industry to promote and shape identities grounded in consumer goods that embody cultural trends, values, and beliefs, or the affordances offered by social media for young people to form identities in present-focused environments that stress individualization and that foreground MDC, neoliberal capitalism offers a flexible, plastic space for self-making. For example, there are indications that LGBTQ+ youth find a sense of self-worth and belongingness on social media that is not available to them within family and even peer contexts within their schools or local communities.45
Young People Self-Making on Social Media: Struggles for Balance
Young people’s responses to the peer and cultural pressures living in highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life can lead to engagement in unhelpful, harmful, and potentially destructive behaviours. Cultural trends encouraging young people to signal increasingly idealized or perfect embodiments of MDC follow a market logic of growth and competition, where performances of continuously improving, culturally promoted extrinsic metrics are necessary to continue securing recognition, belongingness, and self-worth.46 Thus, as young people progressively strive to live productive and satisfying lives, they must negotiate the tension to balance their extrinsic market-driven strivings with fundamental intrinsic needs to feel worthy as human beings, to feel connected to others, and to believe that life is worth living.
The movement of young people’s self-making toward extreme self-displays and self-performances is illustrated by their use of the technological and social affordances made available in the pharmacological space of social media. The pharmacological conception of social media (i.e., as a cultural space for either therapeutics or toxicities) is congruent with substantial empirical research documenting that patterns of associations between social media use and well-being in children and adolescents do not uphold mostly positive nor mostly negative effects, but rather underline the importance of how young people use social media as a space of self-performance, and how patterns of use and digital contexts inform mental health and well-being outcomes.47
Within this complex pharmacological setting, there is growing societal concern and effort to understand and address toxic and desperate acts such as online suicidality and self-harm.48 These destructive online acts have been documented since the first ever live-streamed suicide by a young female named Océane, who displayed strong inclinations to achieve social recognition, if not online celebrity.49 There is also the recent case of Eugenia Cooney, a social media influencer, whose online displays of anorexia nervosa have created a movement of “thinspiration” for her millions of followers across Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube.50 In our individualistic capitalist culture, ego ideal fantasies driven by cultural imperatives seem to operate so strongly as to push people beyond the liminal realities of life and death.
To understand the tragic online experiences of Eugenia and Océane, we make use of ongoing theorizing that conceptualizes social media as a performance space. Incorporating the seminal ideas of Erving Goffman,51 social media has been repeatedly framed as a stage52 where performances transpire, and where, in performing, young people offer themselves up for critique. Online critiques from young people’s performances can occur in sometimes dense and escalating feedback cycles that signal acceptance (e.g., likes) or rejection (negative or no response). By its very technological architecture, social media is a stage that solicits positive or negative critique from a highly expectant audience of peers. However, the difference between theatrical performances and Eugenia and Océane’s performance-signaling on social media is that their characters inevitably collapse, and unavoidably become tied to who these young women actually are and were. Hence the mask becomes flesh. Young people’s performances on social media cannot help but refer back to their embodied selves, full of longings, insecurities, and doubts, and complex feelings embedded in complex relationships. Unfortunately, the technologically mediated communicative space of social media is often deficient in its ability to capture, communicate, and converse around complex, nuanced, and ambiguous performances.
Conclusions
Young people’s self-making in neoliberal capitalism reveals a distinct configuration of self, use of technology, and relationships to peer and broader culture environments. As we have described, young people are motivated by an incessant capitalist demand, a cultural superego, to achieve social status and success. Navigating competitive peer environments and cultural demands, young people leverage MDC in exploiting their talents and skills to garner social status and financial success. Pharmacologically speaking, neoliberal capitalism has been conceptualized as a highly appealing system where innovating societies require an increasing diversity of skills and potential identities from their populations.53 On the other hand, young people are obliged to place their identities on the market, developing and performing self-narratives of success and enhanced self-image with MDC as their lingua franca. Young people’s chances for finding status and success in neoliberal capitalism is greatly diminished if they do not play by the rules of the capitalist game. Unfortunately, the game comes with two rules. First, young players do not all start on the same square; that is, access to resources and opportunities are unequally distributed and are often stratified based on region, race, ethnicity, gender, ability, and socio-economic differences.54 Second, one must continually try to win at the game, even to the point of exhaustion and even if the game is rigged. As sung by Uncle Tupelo, “You can’t break even, you can’t even quit the game.”55
Self-making in neoliberal capitalism presents young people with opportunities but also challenges and adversities through which they seek to develop financially productive and emotionally satisfying lives. To return to the beginning, van den Berg himself noted that while the factors of a specific social organization and historical epoch affect everyone, only a limited number of people will show mental health symptoms and disorder.56 Research to date suggests that young people’s susceptibility to cultural imperatives to achieve status and social success via signaling of status-driven MDC, and thus susceptibility to greater risk for internalizing difficulties, is influenced by the degree to which they are invested in these metrics, perceive that they must conform to peer and cultural pressures to perform them, or show a relatively unintegrated self-concept more susceptible to cultural capitalist demands.57
As pithily expressed by Han, the new commandment of late-modern societies is the imperative to achieve.58 We have documented that young people perceive enormous cultural pressures and expectations on themselves and their peers to perform at the highest level of achievements in their academic and extra-curricular pursuits, embodied by the term “super selves.” Qualitative and quantitative research document that the current demands of highly competitive and unequal capitalist cultures on young people are often unrelenting and increasingly seem unachievable. Young people must self-optimize in order to develop narratives of success and find their place in highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life. It is crucial to recognize that young people’s self-optimization extends beyond the individual young person to their parents and families, schools, and the broader cultural field. Consequently, their self-optimization is embedded in both the provision and stratification of resources that facilitate and constrain human flourishing such as education, health, and mental health services. Convincing empirical data suggests that higher degrees of social inequality are associated with poorer mental health and well-being outcomes, which manifest across the socio-economic spectrum.59
As young people strive to self-optimize and fulfill the insistent demands of highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life, accumulating data suggests that the intense pressures to display status and achieve social success place some young people at risk for internalizing mental health problems. Young people’s tendencies to engage in judgmental social comparisons in competitive environments,60 and tendencies to endorse disproportionate investment in extrinsic compared to intrinsic goals and values,61 are two mechanisms by which these cultural pressures and demands translate into internalizing problems.
At the same time, we remain hopeful that young people have the capacities and can develop the knowledge and skills to negotiate and reckon with the pressures and potential toxic effects of neoliberal capitalism. To promote therapeutics as opposed to toxicities, what may be helpful now is to help young people face the challenges of evolving subjectivities that remain responsive to, and constrained but not subsumed by, predominant cultural values, norms, and expectations. This form of engagement in their own self-making can be a hopeful process that provides young people and their culture with opportunities to facilitate their mental health and well-being, i.e., to foster adaptive person-socio-ecology fits.
Young people developing in highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life require guidance and signposts. Scaffolding must be provided by the relationships and institutions of which they are part, namely families and education, health, artistic, athletic, and mental health systems.
As young people apply their increasingly sophisticated socio-cognitive skills and growing agency to facilitate person-ecology fits, cultural institutions bear equal responsibility to support this process. These cultural spaces must host interpersonal and socio-cultural factors that promote young people’s well-being in highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life. Specifically, these cultural spaces must be protected from insistent pressures toward optimal and perfect self-making, the stigmatizing of diversities and mental health issues, and the pressures of poverty and intensifying social and economic inequalities.
Finally, it is incumbent on psychology and related disciplines involved in addressing young people’s mental health and well-being to recognize and act on the cultural and interpersonal toxicities that may accompany neoliberal capitalism. We would call attention to the intensive competition and individualization that structure young people’s relations to others, and, in a highly problematic turn, the relationship that one develops with oneself. In other words, the paradox is that there is market-mediated competition between people over the relationships that they get to have with themselves as products in the marketplace. Despite a seemingly continual discourse on personal freedom in neoliberal capitalism, young people’s relationships with themselves are predicated on their social standing in relation to how they are valued by others and their possession of the currency (i.e., MDC) that defines successful selves in neoliberal capitalism. Unfortunately, in the mental health disciplines as in the broader culture, the individual is revered while the underlying condition for mental health issues—the culture of individualism and competition which define self-making in highly competitive and achievement-oriented forms of life—is largely ignored. From our vantage point, and until a better politico-economic system addresses the problem at its core, addressing rising internalizing disorders in young people requires attention to their overbearing fear that failure to compete and to succeed is a failure of self and to oneself.
Notes
- Patricia M. Greenfield, “Linking Social Change and Developmental Change: Shifting Pathways of Human Development,” Developmental Psychology 45, no. 2 (2009): 401, https://doi.org/10.1037/a0014726; Helen V. Milner and Bumba Mukherjee. “Democratization and Economic Globalization,” Annual Review of Political Science 12 (2009): 163–81, https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.polisci.12.110507.114722; and Henri C. Santos, Michael E. W. Varnum, and Igor Grossmann. “Global Increases in Individualism,” Psychological Science 28, no. 9 (2017): 1228–39, https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797617700622. ↩
- Carl Ratner, Macro Cultural Psychology: A Political Philosophy of Mind (Oxford University Press, 2012). ↩
- Thomas Teo, “Homo neoliberalus: From Personality to Forms of Subjectivity,” Theory & Psychology 28, no. 5 (2018): 581–99, https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354318794899; and Ulrich Bröckling, The Entrepreneurial Self: Fabricating a New Type of Subject (SAGE Publications, 2015), https://doi.org/10.4135/9781473921283. ↩
- James Davies, Sedated: How Modern Capitalism Created Our Mental Health Crisis (Atlantic Books, 2021); and Sheri Laliberte and Colleen Varcoe, “The Contradictions between Canadian Capitalist Processes and Youth Mental Health: Implications for Mental Health Promotion,” Health Promotion International 36, no. 1 (2021): 250-–61, https://doi.org/10.1093/heapro/daz073. ↩
- Tim Kasser, Steve Cohn, Allen D. Kanner, and Richard M. Ryan, “Some Costs of American Corporate Capitalism: A Psychological Exploration of Value and Goal Conflicts,” Psychological Inquiry 18, no. 1 (2007): 1–22, https://doi.org/10.1080/10478400701386579. ↩
- Jean M. Twenge, Stacy M. Campbell, Brian J. Hoffman, and Charles E. Lance, “Generational Differences in Work Values: Leisure and Extrinsic Values Increasing, Social and Intrinsic Values Decreasing,” Journal of Management 36, no. 5 (2010): 1117–42, https://doi.org/10.1177/0149206309352246. ↩
- Helga Dittmar, Rod Bond, Megan Hurst, and Tim Kasser, “The Relationship between Materialism and Personal Well-Being: A Meta-Analysis,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 107, no. 5 (2014): 879, https://doi.org/10.1037/a0037409; and Anja Van Den Broeck, Bert Schreurs, Karin Proost, Arne Vanderstukken, and Maarten Vansteenkiste. “I Want to Be a Billionaire: How Do Extrinsic and Intrinsic Values Influence Youngsters’ Well-Being?,” The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 682, no. 1 (2019): 204–19, https://doi.org/10.1177/0002716219831658. ↩
- Richard G. Wilkinson and Kate E. Pickett, “Income Inequality and Social Dysfunction,” Annual Review of Sociology 35 (2009): 493–511, https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-soc-070308-115926. ↩
- Carol M. Worthman and Kathy Trang, “Dynamics of Body Time, Social Time and Life History at Adolescence,” Nature 554, no. 7963 (2018): 451–57, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature25750. ↩
- Dittmar et al., “The Relationship between Materialism”; Van Den Broeck et al., “I Want to Be a Billionaire”; and Worthman and Trang, “Dynamics of Body Time.” ↩
- Aleksandra Cichocka and John T. Jost, “Stripped of Illusions? Exploring System Justification Processes in Capitalist and Post‐Communist Societies,” International Journal of Psychology 49, no. 1 (2014): 6–29, https://doi.org/10.1002/ijop.12011; and John T. Jost, Sally Blount, Jeffrey Pfeffer, and György Hunyady, “Fair Market Ideology: Its Cognitive-Motivational Underpinnings,” Research in Organizational Behavior 25 (2003): 53–91, https://doi.org/10.1016/s0191-3085(03)25002-4. ↩
- Colleen S. Conley, Lori M. Hilt, and Carol Hundert Gonzales, “Internalizing in Adolescents and Young Adults,” in APA Handbook of Adolescent and Young Adult Development, ed. L. J. Crockett, G. Carlo, and J. E. Schulenberg (American Psychological Association, 2023), https://doi.org/10.1037/0000298-031. ↩
- Jean M. Twenge and Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, “Age, Gender, Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Birth Cohort Difference on the Children’s Depression Inventory: A Meta-Analysis,” Journal of Abnormal Psychology 111, no. 4 (2002): 578, https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-843x.111.4.578. ↩
- Kathleen Ries Merikangas, Jian-ping He, Marcy Burstein, Sonja A. Swanson, Shelli Avenevoli, Lihong Cui, Corina Benjet, Katholiki Georgiades, and Joel Swendsen, “Lifetime Prevalence of Mental Disorders in US Adolescents: Results from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication–Adolescent Supplement (NCS-A),” Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 49, no. 10 (2010): 980–89, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2010.05.017. ↩
- Melanie S. Askari, Caroline G. Rutherford, Pia M. Mauro, Noah T. Kreski, and Katherine M.Keyes, “Structure and Trends of Externalizing and Internalizing Psychiatric Symptoms and Gender Differences among Adolescents in the US from 1991 to 2018,” Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 57 (2022): 737–48, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00127-021-02189-4; and Ida Blomqvist, Eva Henje Blom, Bruno Hägglöf, and Anne Hammarström, “Increase of Internalized Mental Health Symptoms among Adolescents during the Last Three Decades,” European Journal of Public Health 29, no. 5 (2019): 925–31, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckz028. ↩
- Stephan Collishaw, “Annual Research Review: Secular Trends in Child and Adolescent Mental Health,” Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 56, no. 3 (2015): 370–93, https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.12372. ↩
- Blomqvist et al., “Increase of Internalized Mental Health Symptoms.” ↩
- Byung-Chul Han, The Burnout Society (Stanford University Press, 2015). ↩
- Blomqvist et al., “Increase of Internalized Mental Health Symptoms.” ↩
- James E. Côté, “Youth-Identity Studies: History, Controversies and Future Directions,” in Routledge Handbook of Youth and Young Adulthood, 2nd ed., ed. Andy Furlong (Routledge, 2017). ↩
- Wilkinson and Pickett, “Income Inequality and Social Dysfunction”; Christine Musselin, “New Forms of Competition in Higher Education,” Socio-Economic Review 16, no. 3 (2018): 657–83, https://doi.org/10.1093/ser/mwy033; and Rajani Naidoo, “The Competition Fetish in Higher Education: Varieties, Animators and Consequences,” British Journal of Sociology of Education 37, no. 1 (2016): 1–10, https://doi.org/10.1080/01425692.2015.1116209. ↩
- Butler (2019) provides the empirical literature in support of greater structural instability. See Stephen Butler, “The Impact of Advanced Capitalism on Well-Being: An Evidence-Informed Model,” Human Arenas 2, no. 2 (2019): 200–27, https://doi.org/10.1007/s42087-018-0034-6. ↩
- Stephen Butler, “The Development of Market-Driven Identities in Young People: A Socio-Ecological Evolutionary Approach,” Frontiers in Psychology 12 (2021): 623–75, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.623675. ↩
- Patricia M. Greenfield, “Social Change, Cultural Evolution, and Human Development,” Current Opinion in Psychology 8 (2016): 84–92, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.10.012. ↩
- Côté, “Youth-Identity Studies.” ↩
- Butler, “The Development of Market-Driven Identities in Young People.” ↩
- Maxwell J.D. Ramstead, Samuel P. L. Veissière, and Laurence J. Kirmayer, “Cultural Affordances: Scaffolding Local Worlds through Shared Intentionality and Regimes of Attention,” Frontiers in Psychology 7 (2016): 1090, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01090. ↩
- Paul B. Baltes, “On the Incomplete Architecture of Human Ontogeny: Selection, Optimization, and Compensation as Foundation of Developmental Theory,” American Psychologist 52, no. 4 (1997): 366, https://doi.org/10.1037/0003-066x.52.4.366; and Stephen Butler, “Young People on Social Media in a Globalized World: Self-Optimization in Highly Competitive and Achievement-Oriented Forms of Life,” Frontiers in Psychology 15 (2024): 1–16, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.13406055. ↩
- Hillard S. Kaplan and Steven W. Gangestad, “Life History Theory and Evolutionary Psychology,” in The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, ed. David M. Buss (Wiley & Sons, 2015); David W. Lawson and Ruth Mace, “Optimizing Modern Family Size: Trade-Offs between Fertility and the Economic Costs of Reproduction,” Human Nature 21 (2010): 39–61, https://doi.org/10.1007/s12110-010-9080-6; and Mary K. Shenk, Hillard S. Kaplan, and Paul L. Hooper, “Status Competition, Inequality, and Fertility: Implications for the Demographic Transition,” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 371, no. 1692 (2016): 20150150, https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2015.0150. ↩
- Jane B. Lancaster and Hillard S. Kaplan, “Embodied Capital and Extra-Somatic Wealth in Human Evolution and Human History,” in Human Evolutionary Biology, ed. Michael P. Muehlenbein (Cambridge University Press, 2012), https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511781193; and Carol M. Worthman, “Inside‐Out and Outside‐In? Global Development Theory, Policy, and Youth,” Ethos 39, no. 4 (2011): 432–51, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1352.2011.01211.x. ↩
- Max Roser and Esteban Ortiz-Ospina, “Literacy,” Our World in Data, March 2024, https://ourworldindata.org/literacy; and Eric C. Schneider, Arnav Shah, Michelle M. Doty, Roosa Tikkanen, Katharine Fields, and Reginald D. Williams II, “Mirror Mirror 2021: Reflecting Poorly: Health Care in the US Compared to Other High-Income Countries,” The Commonwealth Fund, August 2021, https://www.commonwealthfund.org/sites/default/files/2021-08/Schneider_Mirror_Mirror_2021.pdf. ↩
- Conley et al. “Internalizing in Adolescents.” ↩
- Jan Hendrik Van den Berg, The Changing Nature of Man: Introduction to a Historical Psychology (W.W. Norton, 1961). ↩
- Musselin, “New Forms of Competition”; and Naidoo, “The Competition Fetish.” and an increasing prominence and sophistication of the extrinsic-value structures of consumer economies. In these consumer economies, subjective well-being is more likely to be linked to achieving and promoting one’s status,[35. Douglas T. Kenrick and Jaimie Arona Krems, “Well-Being, Self-Actualization, and Fundamental Motives: An Evolutionary Perspective,” in Handbook of Well-Being, ed. E. Diener, S. Oishi, and L. Tay (DEF Publishers, 2018), https://www.nobascholar.com. ↩
- Bo Winegard, Ben Winegard, and David C. Geary, “The Status Competition Model of Cultural Production,” Evolutionary Psychological Science 4 (2018): 351–71, https://doi.org/10.1007/s40806-018-0147-7. ↩
- Baltes, “On the Incomplete Architecture of Human Ontogeny.” ↩
- Butler, “The Development of Market-Driven Identities in Young People.” ↩
- Taryn A. Myers and Janis H. Crowther, “Social Comparison as a Predictor of Body Dissatisfaction: A Meta-Analytic Review,” Journal of Abnormal Psychology 118, no. 4 (2009): 683, https://doi.org/10.1037/a0016763; Erin A. Vogel, Jason P. Rose, Bradley M. Okdie, Katheryn Eckles, and Brittany Franz, “Who Compares and Despairs? The Effect of Social Comparison Orientation on Social Media Use and Its Outcomes,” Personality and Individual Differences 86 (2015): 249–56, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2015.06.026; and Chia-chen Yang, Sean M. Holden, and Jati Ariati, “Social Media and Psychological Well-Being Among Youth: The Multidimensional Model of Social Media Use,” Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review 24, no. 3 (2021): 631–50, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10567-021-00359-z. ↩
- Paul Gilbert, Kirsten McEwan, Rebecca Bellew, Allison Mills, and Corinne Gale, “The Dark Side of Competition: How Competitive Behaviour and Striving to Avoid Inferiority Are Linked to Depression, Anxiety, Stress and Self‐Harm,” Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice 82, no. 2 (2009): 123–36, https://doi.org/10.1348/147608308X379806. ↩
- Lovisa Broms, Susanna Hedenborg, and Aage Radmann, “Super Equestrians—The Construction of Identity/ies and Impression Management Among Young Equestrians in Upper Secondary School Settings on Social Media,” Sport, Education and Society 27, no. 4 (2022): 462–74, https://doi.org/10.1080/13573322.2020.1859472; and Renée Spencer, Jill Walsh, Belle Liang, Angela M. Desilva Mousseau, and Terese J. Lund, “Having It All? A Qualitative Examination of Affluent Adolescent Girls’ Perceptions of Stress and Their Quests for Success,” Journal of Adolescent Research 33, no. 1 (2018): 3–33, https://doi.org/10.1177/0743558416670990. ↩
- Thomas Curran and Andrew P. Hill, “Perfectionism Is Increasing Over Time: A Meta-Analysis of Birth Cohort Differences from 1989 to 2016,” Psychological Bulletin 145, no. 4 (2019): 410, https://doi.org/10.1037/bul0000138. ↩
- Benard Stiegler, The Age of Disruption: Technology and Madness in Digital Capitalism (Polity Press, 2019). ↩
- Butler, “The Development of Market-Driven Identities in Young People.” ↩
- Michael Hammond, “Reward Allowances and Contrast Effects in Social Evolution: A Challenge to Zygmunt Bauman’s Liquid Modernity,” in Oxford Handbook of Evolution, Biology, and Society, ed. Rosemary L. Hopcroft (Oxford University Press, 2018), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190299323.013.8. ↩
- Jessica N. Fish, Lauren B. McInroy, Megan S. Paceley, Natasha D. Williams, Sara Henderson, Deborah S. Levine, and Rachel N. Edsall, “‘I’m Kinda Stuck at Home With Unsupportive Parents Right Now’: LGBTQ Youths’ Experiences With COVID-19 and the Importance of Online Support,” Journal of Adolescent Health 67, no. 3 (2020): 450–52, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2020.06.002. ↩
- Curran and Hill, “Perfectionism Is Increasing Over Time,” 410. ↩
- Marc S. Tibber and Emma Silver, “A Trans-Diagnostic Cognitive Behavioural Conceptualisation of the Positive and Negative Roles of Social Media Use in Adolescents’ Mental Health and Wellbeing,” The Cognitive Behaviour Therapist 15 (2022): e7, https://doi.org/10.1017/s1754470x22000034. ↩
- Tibber and Silver, “A Trans-Diagnostic Cognitive Behavioural Conceptualisation,” e7. ↩
- Rana Dasgupta, “Notes on a Suicide,” Granta 140, August 3, 2017, https://granta.com/notes-on-a-suicide. ↩
- Gemma Cobb, Negotiating Thinness Online: The Cultural Politics of Pro-Anorexia (Routledge, 2020). ↩
- Erving Goffman, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life (The Overlook Press, 1959). ↩
- Bernie Hogan, “The Presentation of Self in the Age of Social Media: Distinguishing Performances and Exhibitions Online,” Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society 30, no. 6 (2010): 377–86, https://doi.org/10.1177/0270467610385893. ↩
- Winegard, Winegard, and Geary, “The Status Competition Model”; and Hammond, “Reward Allowances and Contrast Effects.” ↩
- Wilkinson and Pickett, “Income Inequality and Social Dysfunction”; and Worthman and Trang, “Dynamics of Body Time.” ↩
- Uncle Tupelo, lyrics to “High Water,” accessed November 28th, 2023, https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-e&q=uncle+tupelo+high+water+lyrics. ↩
- Van den Berg, The Changing Nature of Man. ↩
- Jennifer D. Campbell, Paul D. Trapnell, Steven J. Heine, Ilana M. Katz, Loraine F. Lavallee, and Darrin R. Lehman, “Self-Concept Clarity: Measurement, Personality Correlates, and Cultural Boundaries,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 70, no. 1 (1996): 141, https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.70.1.141; Michael H. Kernis, “Toward a Xonceptualization of Optimal Self-Esteem.” Psychological Inquiry 14, no. 1 (2003): 1–26, https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327965pli1401_01; and L. R. Vartanian and L. E. Hayward, “Self-Concept Clarity and Body Dissatisfaction,” in Self-Concept Clarity: Perspectives on Assessment, Research, and Applications, ed. J. Lodi-Smith and K. DeMarree (Springer, 2017), https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71547-6_11. ↩
- Han, The Burnout Society. ↩
- Dittmar et al., “The Relationship between Materialism.” ↩
- Myers and Crowther, “Social Comparison as a Predictor.” ↩
- Dittmar et al., “The Relationship between Materialism.” ↩