Genocide, Subculture, and Counterculture
If a situation meets the legal or sociological definition of genocide (like the allegations in Gaza or Sudan), should that genocide be studied as a counterculture or a subculture?The short answer is no — but with an important nuance about the perpetrators.
1. Genocide itself is not a culture or subculture
A subculture is a group of people within a larger society who share distinctive norms, values, symbols, or practices (e.g., skateboarders, goths). A counterculture actively rejects and opposes dominant societal values (e.g., hippies, punk).
Genocide is not a group of people — it is a crime, a process, or a state policy. You cannot “study genocide as a subculture” for the same reason you cannot study “earthquake as a subculture.” Categories of social groups apply to people, not to events or atrocities.
2. The perpetrators might form an extremist subculture or counterculture
Here is the nuance. The people who carry out genocide — say, members of a militia, a political movement, or a state security apparatus — can absolutely be studied as a subculture (if they operate within a larger society) or a counterculture (if they explicitly reject mainstream humanitarian or democratic norms).
Example: The Nazi SS developed a distinct subculture with symbols, rituals, language, and a violent ideology that rejected Weimar Germany’s mainstream values. That qualifies as a counterculture within German society at the time.
Example: Militias in Sudan’s Janjaweed or RSF have developed a violent, ethnic-supremacist subculture that exists alongside — but in opposition to — formal state law and international norms.
So you could study genocidal groups as countercultures or subcultures. But you would not study “the genocide of Darfur” itself as a subculture — rather, you would study the perpetrator culture that enabled it.
3. The victims are not a subculture because of the genocide
Victims of genocide (e.g., Tutsi in Rwanda, Rohingya in Myanmar, or specific groups in Gaza or Sudan) may already form a cultural or ethnic group — but that group is not defined by the genocide. Their identity exists independently. Calling them a “subculture” because they are being targeted would be analytically wrong and ethically troubling (it reduces their identity to their victimization).
4. What typology does apply to genocide as a social phenomenon?
If you want to classify genocide sociologically, it fits under collective violence, state crime, or institutional deviance — not under subculture or counterculture. Standard sociological typologies include:
— State-organized crime (where the state itself violates international law)
— Politicide (destruction of political groups, excluded from UN definition)
— Ideological extremism (when a counterculture holds state power)
The following table summarizes the key distinctions without using list formatting.
Summary table
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Should the genocide itself be studied as a subculture or counterculture? | No — genocide is a crime/process, not a social group. |
| Should the perpetrator groups (e.g., militias, genocidal regimes) be studied as countercultures? | Yes, potentially — if they reject mainstream norms and act within a society. |
| Should the victim groups be studied as subcultures because they are targeted? | No — their identity pre‑exists and is not defined by genocide. |
No, genocides as such should not be studied as counter or subcultures. But the genocidal movements that commit them often fit those categories perfectly.