Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2009, Page 71

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2009, Page 71
DREYMAR UM BILAR Á OYGGJUM 69 behaviour with high speed and races on deserted road stretches. Nothing, it seems, can stop their game of death. Some boys even, implicitly, consider their dead comra- des as car cult martyrs. Street racing Young people talk a lot about street races, but few have participated in them. Faroese street races are secret informal ventures without any clear organization. The street- racing youth doesn’t represent an elaborate youth culture even if a limited group of young men form the hard core of the street- racing milieu. These men have similar values as street-racing youths from other North European countries. Finnish youth subcul- tures have strong street-racing traditions, says the sociologist Heli Vaaranen (2004). "The street-racing youths used their cultu- ral performance to create nighttime counter-experiences for their daytime experiences of lost opportunities. This counter-experience became 'a room of his own', it defned a street racer's masculine identity, and itfunctioned as a coping stra- tegy to fight exclusion" ln Finland, Vaaranen unveils, the street- racing youths are in general marginalized working-class boys and girls that don’t have many success stories from everyday life. The night-time show puts the otherwise rnarginalized man in the centre, makes him the hero with high status among peers. Faroese street-racing youths are not very difFerent from other young drivers, but they are indeed risk takers that don’t take road safety seriously. The street-racing youths are usually young men from village working- class homes with a conservative interpre- tation of masculine values. Some of them are the sons of car loving Atlantic cowboys from the 1980s and 1990s. Usually the race, taking place far from residential areas at night, has two participating cars manned with the drivers only. Other persons control the race's start and fmishing lines as well as the poten- tial presence of police or other unwelcomed vehicles. Reputed car-racing road stretches are, my informants tell me, most often long, wide and straight. But it is important to regularly change location in order to avoid the atten- tion of the police. Besides, it would be boring routine, say some experienced informants, to use the same piece of road again and again. The racing youth's high spot are weekend nights when many races take place. Frequently, the races start accidentally, after the boys, gathered around their cars, have been engaged in boasting about power, fearlessness and women. Suddenly the rivalling pals have to rush to an appointed road for the risky street battle to begin. Another situation that can lead to impulsive street races is when a group of young people, driving in a couple of cars, is heading for a village or town in order to participate in social activities. All of a sudden two or three drivers, wanting to pilot the convoy, speed up and start a 'fast and furious' game. Drivers that participate in spontaneous races often show egocentric behaviour, igno- ring the terror their frightened backseat 'hostages' are subjected to. To give the pas- sive passengers in risk taking drivers' cars the courage to say "stop!" is one of the main challenges in traffic accident prevention
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