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An '''anti-prom''' or '''morp''' is a social event often staged by [[high school]] [[student]]s as a [[protest]] against, or [[boycott]] of, their school's official [[prom]], as an alternative celebration. Other times, it may be an unofficial prom, planned by the students themselves so that is not under the control of the school.
An '''anti-prom''' or '''morp''' is a social event often staged by [[high school]] [[student]]s as a [[protest]] against, or [[boycott]] of, their school's official [[prom]], as an alternative celebration. Other times, it may be an unofficial prom, planned by the students themselves so that is not under the control of the school.



Revision as of 07:38, 21 June 2007

An anti-prom or morp is a social event often staged by high school students as a protest against, or boycott of, their school's official prom, as an alternative celebration. Other times, it may be an unofficial prom, planned by the students themselves so that is not under the control of the school.

Some of the more common reasons for the creation of an anti-prom include the desire to curb the large cost of a traditional prom, to listen to music other than that expected to be played at the real prom, to have a smaller, more personal get-together, or have looser and less strict rules than the school's.

The attendees of an anti-prom usually disagree with the values of the in-crowd who, stereotypically, organizes the prom from the preparatory stages to the after-parties. In particular, anti-prom attendees protest what they regard as the vanity, excess, and conformity that the prom culture expects from students. This ethos is captured in a recent article in online culture magazine Slate, Take Back the Prom, in which the author discusses such rebellion from popular prom culture. Anti-proms do not follow any prescribed format, catering instead to the varied tastes of the large spectrum of students who feel dissociated from prom culture. Nevertheless, anti-prom participants are generally concerned with arranging social activities that are not only fun and enjoyable, but which also serve as an assertion of solidarity and of the legitimacy of social difference.

Others avoid prom because of religious convictions. Strict Christians, Jews, or Muslims sometimes have beliefs that cause them to forgo social events, like prom, that typically involve close male-female interactions between young people. Different sects of these religions believe different things in regard to such environments, and some denominations are more permissive than others.

Sexual orientation sometimes plays a role in leading students to form or attend an anti-prom: gay and lesbian students (homosexuals) who feel that attending their school's traditional prom with a same-sex partner would be problematic might choose to hold their own gathering.

One anti-prom in Georgia, USA, gained notoriety for excluding African-Americans, Latinos, Asian-Americans, and other minorities. [1]

Several popular American TV shows have featured anti-proms in one or more of their episodes, including Dawson's Creek[2], Malcolm in the Middle[3], Higher Ground, Ugly Betty, What I Like About You, and Veronica Mars.