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The author explores the refreshingly radical aspect of adolescent subversiveness. This essay first contrasts subversiveness with rebelliousness in its more satiric and questioning quality. The author then contends that adolescent subversiveness is related to the gradual development in an adult for independence of mind. The author relates a vignette regarding the founder of the Wright Institute in Berkeley, Nevitt Sanford, who refused to sign a draconian loyalty oath required of U.C. Berkeley faculty during the McCarthy era in order to convey the positive aspects of subversion. The essay relates developmental aspects of subversiveness to uses of the concept in other disciplines such as Social Theory, Queer and Feminist Theories and Literary Criticism.

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This page is a summary of: Subversiveness in Adolescence, Contemporary Psychoanalysis, July 2017, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/00107530.2017.1355693.
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