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Guys and Guns Amok: Domestic Terrorism and School Shootings from the Oklahoma City Bombing to the Virginia Tech Massacre [Hardback]

3.14/5 (21 ratings by Goodreads)
(UCLA, USA)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 232 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 453 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jan-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1594514925
  • ISBN-13: 9781594514920
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 210,77 €
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  • Bibliotēkām
  • Formāts: Hardback, 232 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 453 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jan-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1594514925
  • ISBN-13: 9781594514920
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
In the US, about 12,000 people die in murderous gunfire. Kellner (philosophy of Education, U. of California Los Angeles) calls the situation a national scandal and finds plenty of causes, including the process of male socialization in the US, the popularity of gun culture and its increasingly deadly technologies, the prevalence of militarism, and the preoccupation of the mass media with violence. However, he also looks deeply into the psyches of the men and boys who shoot down family, friends and strangers, finding a fundamental insecurity as men that triggers quests for ultra-masculine identity. Kellner notes that stricter gun laws and tighter security could help, but that moving beyond violence and instituting a positive, peaceful model of masculinity in schools, mental health treatment, juvenile offender programs, prisons, and other institutions is bound to be more effective than the violence perpetuated in such current techniques as capital punishment. Annotation ©2008 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Recenzijas

"The national conversation about school shootings and other violent rampages lurches from one tragedy to the next, with little discussion of the systemic and historical forces that help to produce them. By contrast, Douglas Kellner's deep and learned analysis shows that 'individual' acts of violence are rooted in a larger crisis of masculinity that manifests itself in everything from boys killing their classmates to the ongoing pandemic of men's violence against womennot to mention escalating militarism and its effects at all levels of U.S. society." Jackson Katz, Creator of the film Tough Guise and author of The Macho Paradox: Why Some Men Hurt Women and How All Men Can Help

Kellner has given us an unsettling but much-needed and fascinating journey through the dark side of American society, where violent episodes like those at Columbine High School and Virginia Tech have become less shocking than they once were. This superb, provocative, well-written account situates what might be viewed as isolated killing sprees within a broader understanding of the media spectacle, trends at work in popular culture, the male gun fetish, and intensified U.S. war making. This is critical social theory at its best.

Carl Boggs, author of Imperial Delusions and coauthor of The Hollywood War Machine

Douglas Kellner makes all of us who watched films of the Virginia Tech shootings with horror think more deeply about how complicit we might beas creators and consumers of media coverage of school violencein undermining democracy. Kellner entices us here to think about the anti-democratic ideas about masculinity and the gun culture we all in different ways have helped perpetuate. This is a thought-deepening book. Cynthia Enloe, author of Globalization and Militarism: Feminists Make the Link

Kellner explains the wave of school shootings and mass terrorism that has become too common in the U.S. Numerous scholars and social commentators have attempted to provide a reasonable explanation for the violence. However, no one has clearly articulated a comprehensive reason for this complex phenomenon. Recommended. CHOICE

Kellner combines a penetrating analysis of the relationships between (white) masculine identity construction, domestic terrorism, school violence, U.S. gun culture, and an intensively militarized public culture with realistic recommendations for moving beyond these relationships. Book Smarts

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Media Spectacle and the ``Virginia Tech Massacre'' 1(2)
The Time of the Spectacle
3(4)
Guy Debord's ``Society of the Spectacle'' and Its Limitations
7(2)
Reading the Spectacle with Critical Social Theory and Cultural Studies
9(5)
Societal Violence and Guys and Guns Amok
14(5)
The Epidemic of School Shootings
19(7)
Media Culture, Militarism, and Violent Masculinity
26(2)
In This Book
28(5)
Deconstructing the Spectacle: Race, Guns, and the Culture Wars
33(28)
The Shootings and the Politics of Race
33(5)
A Convocation and Cho's Multimedia Dossier
38(5)
Guns and Political Scapegoating
43(7)
School and Workplace Security: The Debate Begins
50(3)
Mourning, Copycats, and Ideological Manipulation
53(8)
The Situation of Contemporary Youth
61(28)
From Boomers to Busters
63(6)
Post-Boomers and Contemporary Youth
69(5)
Youth Alienation, Violence, and the War against Youth
74(2)
The Struggle against the War on Youth
76(7)
Perils of Youth
83(6)
Constructing Male Identities and the Spectacle of Terror
89(50)
White Male Identity Politics
90(5)
Militia, Right-Wing Extremism, and Terrorist Bombings
95(5)
Home-Grown Terrorism: Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City Bombing
100(7)
Harvest of Rage
107(6)
The Unabomber and the Politics of Terror
113(5)
Middle-Class White Male Columbine High School Shootings
118(1)
The Columbine Media Spectacle and Its Exploitation
119(7)
Shooting at Columbine with Michael Moore: Guns, U.S. History, and Violence in America
126(5)
Seung-Hui Cho in the Borderlands between the Korean and the American
131(8)
What Is to Be Done?
139(33)
Aftermath
142(4)
Gun Laws, School and Workplace Safety, and Mental Health Care: The Delicate Balance
146(8)
Beyond the Culture of Male Violence and Rage
154(5)
New Literacies, Democratization, and the Reconstruction of Education
159(5)
Politics, Prisons, and the Abolition Democracy Project
164(1)
Horrors of the Prison-Industrial-Military Complex
165(2)
The Time of Abolitions
167(5)
Notes 172(29)
References 201(7)
Index 208


Douglas Kellner, professor in the Graduate School of Education, UCLA, is the author of many books, including Grand Theft 2000 (Rowman & Littlefield 2001) about the last presidential election.