Description

Book Synopsis
Violence affects us all. There are daily reports of murders, shootings, abductions and child abuse in the media. We may be horrified and disturbed by violence but is also fascinates and intrigues us. Widely reported crimes profoundly affect the way in which we view our own humanity and leave us searching for explanations. How and why do such terrible events happen? Who are these people and what drives them to commit such appalling acts of brutality and destruction? Elie Godsi examines the lives of the perpetrators of violence and offers us ways of making sense of acts that seem beyond our comprehension. He explores the roots of violence and distress in personal experience and offers a challenging exploration of the way in which society tries to make sense of madness and badness. He is critical of current cultural and medical perspectives that exaggerate biological, genetic and psychological explanations and marginalise the contribution of brutalising social and environmental influences. He challenges us to consider a more critical and compassionate view of violence and personal distress, one that places these experiences within a global social, cultural and economic context.

Trade Review
A book that is as broad as this inevitably leaves the reader with questions about how and where to act. Indeed, this thought provoking quality is one of the many strengths of this book, which deserves the widest possible readership for its clarity, ambitious scope and radical myth busting in an area in which the ratio between cultural cliche and genuine knowledge has never been a favourable one. Paul Moloney & Suzanne Elliot, Clinical Pyschologists, Journal of Critical Psychology, Counselling and Psychotherapy, 2005.

Table of Contents
Introduction 1 Perpetrators and Victims 2 Making Sense: Towards a social ecology 3 The Past and the Future: The legacy of child abuse 4 Victims and Perpetrators 5 Troubled Children, Troubled Adults 6 Violence in Society 7 The Globalisation of Violence

Violence and Society: Making Sense of Madness and

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    A Paperback / softback by Elie Godsi

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      View other formats and editions of Violence and Society: Making Sense of Madness and by Elie Godsi

      Publisher: PCCS Books
      Publication Date: 01/06/2004
      ISBN13: 9781898059622, 978-1898059622
      ISBN10: 1898059624

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Violence affects us all. There are daily reports of murders, shootings, abductions and child abuse in the media. We may be horrified and disturbed by violence but is also fascinates and intrigues us. Widely reported crimes profoundly affect the way in which we view our own humanity and leave us searching for explanations. How and why do such terrible events happen? Who are these people and what drives them to commit such appalling acts of brutality and destruction? Elie Godsi examines the lives of the perpetrators of violence and offers us ways of making sense of acts that seem beyond our comprehension. He explores the roots of violence and distress in personal experience and offers a challenging exploration of the way in which society tries to make sense of madness and badness. He is critical of current cultural and medical perspectives that exaggerate biological, genetic and psychological explanations and marginalise the contribution of brutalising social and environmental influences. He challenges us to consider a more critical and compassionate view of violence and personal distress, one that places these experiences within a global social, cultural and economic context.

      Trade Review
      A book that is as broad as this inevitably leaves the reader with questions about how and where to act. Indeed, this thought provoking quality is one of the many strengths of this book, which deserves the widest possible readership for its clarity, ambitious scope and radical myth busting in an area in which the ratio between cultural cliche and genuine knowledge has never been a favourable one. Paul Moloney & Suzanne Elliot, Clinical Pyschologists, Journal of Critical Psychology, Counselling and Psychotherapy, 2005.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction 1 Perpetrators and Victims 2 Making Sense: Towards a social ecology 3 The Past and the Future: The legacy of child abuse 4 Victims and Perpetrators 5 Troubled Children, Troubled Adults 6 Violence in Society 7 The Globalisation of Violence

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