Moral Panic Essay

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The Cultural Power of the Moral Panic over I-Dosing Moral panics surrounding the health, wellbeing, and behavior of teenagers have flared up consistently over the past decade, from getting drunk off vodka tampons to getting ‘high’ off MP3s downloaded on the Internet, or i-dosing. The popularity of the Internet among youth has inflamed moral panics, in which parents shift the blame onto a media form due to their fears about a new technology or a cultural phenomenon that they cannot control, and which they perceive as negatively impacting society. In his article The Cultural Power of an Anti-Television Metaphor, Jason Mittell discusses how framing a perceived societal ill as similar to a drug makes people believe it is a public health threat. The scientifically baseless moral panic of i-dosing illustrates the fears of parents, community authority figures, and the media that the Internet …show more content…

I-dosing is simply one moral panic building off the broader framework of this metaphor. Mittell argues that once something is classified as a “drug” in the minds of the public, it follows that the “drug” should be regulated for the good of public health (Mittell 234). Thus, the moral panic becomes a means of asserting societal control over a medium—the Internet, in the case of i-dosing (ibid). This can be seen with the calls across the mainstream media for parents to better monitor their children’s internet access and use, and in schools restricting access to cellphones in order to prevent the students from using them for undesirable purposes, such as i-dosing (Iwasinski). The Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics specifically issued a “call to action” for parents, stressing that they needed to be more aware of how their children were using the Internet and not dismiss it as “harmless” (Iwasinski). Thus, the moral panic of i-dosing reinforced the idea that unfettered access to the Internet harms

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