Why
bullying occurs
Research
suggests that the increase in bullying that occurs in the transition
from elementary to middle school is associated with two social
aspects of the onset of adolescence:
- Growing
desire for autonomy from parents
- Increased
reliance on peers as the major social support
Advocates
of this view speculate that lack of clear guidelines regarding
how to achieve social status in a new school leads to a reliance
on the social stratification achieved through bullying.
Some
interpretations of group bullying go a step further, arguing that
it is a worldwide phenomenon that serves as a sort of aggressive
ritual, through which social relationships are constructed and
affirmed—albeit at severe expense to the victim. They note, in support of this thesis, that
clowning and laughter are more likely to accompanying bullying
than anger or serious fighting.
One
author likens bullying to professional wrestling, which he sees
as a kind of morality play, in which a stoic hero suffers at the
hands of an unprincipled, brutal villain, who is ultimately and
justly vanquished, amid great histrionics, by the hero. If that analogy is to be accepted, it makes
bullying all the more objectionable, since the bullying victim
rarely achieves a morally edifying victory over his oppressors.
A
closer analogy for the advocate of the ritual character of bullying
would be to view the victim as a classic scapegoat—a weak and
marginalized individual who is punished for allegedly embodying
some threat to the integrity or dignity of the group. This interpretation
elevates bullying from merely odious to profoundly disturbing.
It calls attention to the fact that isolation, enforced and visible
powerlessness and a resulting “right” to oppress is exactly the
strategy the Nazis employed to inaugurate the extermination of
six million Jews and that Stalin used to justify the policies
through which he starved seven million Ukrainian kulaks
(small landowners) to death in order to collectivize Soviet agriculture.
While
80 to 90 percent of students indicate that watching bullying makes
them uncomfortable, most seem to tolerate the discomfort rather
well. Fifty-four percent of the time they reinforce the bullying
by passively watching and 21 percent of the remainder actively
participate. Only 25 percent of the time do they intervene
on the victim’s behalf, even though doing so ends the bullying
attack within 10 seconds in a majority (57%) of instances.
A
bully frequently has a built-in audience of henchmen who accompany
him, assuring that his acts will be applauded and that the victim—and
perhaps the bystanders as well—are safely cowed.
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