What is the meaning of “Rebel Without a Cause”?

LJYCarlo21

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I’ve heard the phrase “Rebel Without a Cause” and know it’s also a movie title. What does it actually mean, and how is it used in general conversation?

 
Rebel Without a Cause is a term used to refer to an individual who rebels or defies authority without a clear reason or purpose. It is also the name of a well known 1955 movie of teenage rebellion with James Dean playing the lead role.
 
“Rebel Without a Cause” refers to someone who rejects rules or authority without a clear reason or purpose. The phrase comes from the 1955 film starring James Dean, where the character acts out because of emotional struggles, not a specific cause.
 
The phrase “Rebel Without a Cause” refers to someone who rebels or challenges authority, social norms, or expectations without a clear reason or purpose. It describes a person driven by inner conflict, frustration, or a search for identity rather than by a specific cause or injustice.

The term became famous from the 1955 film Rebel Without a Cause starring James Dean, which portrays disaffected youth struggling with alienation and misunderstanding in postwar American society. Since then, it’s often used to describe aimless rebellion or teenage angst.
 
“Rebel Without a Cause” means someone who rejects rules or authority without a clear reason or goal. It describes a person rebelling purely out of frustration or identity crisis, not purpose. The phrase became popular after the 1955 James Dean film portraying youthful defiance and misunderstood rebellion.
 
Rebel Without a Cause refers to a person who is rebellious against the authority or society without an apparent or definite explanation. It is synonymous with the inner conflict and frustration as well as the rebellion of youth as popularized by the 1955 film starring James Dean, and does not involve intentional defiance or even ideology.
 
“Rebel Without a Cause” means someone who rebels or acts out without a clear reason or purpose, often expressing inner confusion or frustration.
 
The term defines an individual who defies authority or conventions without obvious intention as is common to do it out of frustration instead of sense.
 
The term is used to describe a person who breaks rules, or an authority, without any apparent explanation or productive intent.
 
The term derives its name after a 1955 movie by the same title and starring James Dean, and is used to describe an individual, typically a young one, who rebels against authority and social conventions without necessarily having a particular objective or political cause. It means purposeless alienation, impatience and an overall dissent with society.
 
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