Explanation
Transgression describes the act of crossing, violating, or challenging established norms, rules, taboos, or boundaries within a society. The concept is widely used in sociology, criminology, philosophy, cultural studies, and legal theory to analyze behaviors that exceed socially accepted limits.
Transgressions can take many forms, including legal violations, moral deviance, political protest, artistic provocation, religious blasphemy, or symbolic resistance against dominant cultural norms. Not all transgressions are criminal; some are socially celebrated or interpreted as forms of creativity, innovation, or emancipation.
In sociology and criminology, transgression is closely connected to the social construction of norms and deviance. Boundaries between acceptable and unacceptable behavior are historically and culturally variable. Acts considered transgressive in one society or historical period may later become normalized or even socially valued.
Transgressive behavior often provokes strong social reactions because it challenges collective values, moral boundaries, and systems of authority. Public debates surrounding obscenity, sexuality, political extremism, protest movements, subcultures, or provocative art frequently revolve around questions of transgression.
In criminology, transgression is particularly relevant for understanding deviance, subcultures, symbolic resistance, and edgework. Cultural criminology emphasizes the emotional, aesthetic, and performative dimensions of transgressive acts, especially in contexts such as graffiti, vandalism, illicit nightlife, radical protest, or urban exploration.
Transgression may also function as a mechanism of social change. By challenging dominant norms and institutions, transgressive actors can contribute to shifts in morality, law, and cultural values. Many social movements initially perceived as transgressive—including feminist, queer, or civil rights movements—later influenced broader social transformation.
At the same time, transgression can trigger moral panics, intensified social control, surveillance, and punitive responses by state institutions. The concept therefore highlights the dynamic relationship between deviance, power, resistance, and social order.
Theoretical Reference
Transgression is associated with sociology, criminology, cultural studies, and social theory. Émile Durkheim viewed boundary violations as functional for defining collective morality. Michel Foucault analyzed how institutions construct and regulate social boundaries through power and discipline. Georges Bataille explored transgression as the deliberate crossing of prohibitions and taboos. In criminology, Cultural Criminology examines the emotional and symbolic dimensions of transgressive acts, while interactionist approaches emphasize how transgression is socially defined and labeled.
Further Reading
Cultural Criminology
Cultural Criminology is not a single, unified theory of crime, but rather a critical perspective and research tradition. Emerging in the 1990s, it examines crime and crime control as cultural practices, focusing on how meaning, symbolism, style, and representation shape…
Jeff Ferrell, Keith Hayward & Jock Young – Cultural Criminology: An Invitation (2008)
Cultural Criminology: An Invitation Cultural Criminology: An Invitation, first published in 2008 by Jeff Ferrell, Keith J. Hayward, and Jock Young, represents the first comprehensive foundational work on cultural criminology. The book functions as a programmatic introduction, a theoretical systematization,…
Mike Presdee – Cultural Criminology and the Carnival of Crime (2000)
With his work Cultural Criminology and the Carnival of Crime (2000), Mike Presdee established a radical perspective within Cultural Criminology. Drawing on Mikhail Bakhtin’s carnival theory, Presdee interprets crime not just as a rule violation but as a cultural expression—a…
Jeff Ferrell – Tearing Down the Streets: Adventures in Urban Anarchy (2001)
With Tearing Down the Streets, American sociologist and criminologist Jeff Ferrell published a work in 2001 that is exemplary of Cultural Criminology. In this book, Ferrell examines how urban spaces are transformed into zones of conflict through practices like graffiti,…