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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Dana Crowley JackPublisher: Harvard University Press Imprint: Harvard University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 24.00cm Weight: 0.600kg ISBN: 9780674064850ISBN 10: 0674064852 Pages: 331 Publication Date: 15 November 1999 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Out of stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsThis study challenges traditional views of aggression as a simple destructive impulse of a personal trait that is predominantly male. For women, Jack finds, aggression arises out of a need or desire to establish intimate connections with others. She deftly combines a feminist power perspective with psychological insights to explain a wide variety of societal problems like sexual harassment, eating disorders, depression, difficulties for women in traditional male occupations, and domestic violence...This original, extensively referenced analysis broadens our understanding of aggression.--Antoinette Brinkman Library Journal Jack, who offered important insights in Silencing the Self , explores another facet of women's psychology--women's experience of their own aggression. She argues that both depression and aggression originate in disconnection, and that aggression is fundamentally relational rather than intrapersonal in character...Jack explores provocative subjects such as the societal taboos on female use of aggression; the collusion of psychology with molding conforming female behavior; and the double bind faced by women whose career path requires use of aggressive behavior. -- L. M. C. Abbott Trapp Choice Behind the Mask is based on interviews the author conducted with 60 women, ages 17-75, mostly from the Pacific Northwest. Jack was surprised to hear how women in her study defined the range of experiences they considered 'aggressive, ' from saying what they think or using a certain tone of voice, to physical assault...Some of the stories seem innocuous, but they speak to the pervasive (and justified) fears women have of negative social responses: a police officer toned down her feelings of exuberance after physically subduing two shoplifters, not wishing to appear to her male colleagues as if she enjoyed it too much. A college rower enjoyed feeling aggressive in workouts, challenged male professors for sexism, and even carried a gun when riding her horse on back roads, but raised her voice only once in four years with her boyfriend, for fear of alienating him. An obstetrical surgeon was warned by hospital administrators to refrain from 'improper behavior' that could be interpreted by An adept and sympathetic interviewer as well as a perceptive and talented writer, Jack relates the stories of women who span the range of age, class and ethnic background to give a full picture of how women perceive aggression in our culture...In our society, she writes, the myth is that men are naturally aggressive and women are naturally and innately unaggressive, which leaves women to seek outlets for their anger in 'sneaky' ways. It is hoped that this illuminating and very intelligent work will help dismantle that mythology, so that women can be seen, and heard, as they are.--Elizabeth Millard ForeWord Jack, who offered important insights in Silencing the Self , explores another facet of women's psychology--women's experience of their own aggression. She argues that both depression and aggression originate in disconnection, and that aggression is fundamentally relational rather than intrapersonal in character...Jack explores provocative subjects such as the societal taboos on female use of aggression; the collusion of psychology with molding conforming female behavior; and the double bind faced by women whose career path requires use of aggressive behavior.--L. M. C. Abbott Trapp Choice This study challenges traditional views of aggression as a simple destructive impulse of a personal trait that is predominantly male. For women, Jack finds, aggression arises out of a need or desire to establish intimate connections with others. She deftly combines a feminist power perspective with psychological insights to explain a wide variety of societal problems like sexual harassment, eating disorders, depression, difficulties for women in traditional male occupations, and domestic violence...This original, extensively referenced analysis broadens our understanding of aggression.--Antoinette Brinkman Library Journal For a few, aggression finds outlet in real, physical violence. But for most it means internalizing and hiding behind masks of complacency or silence. Jack's book suggests that some forms of aggression can be valuable, and that women's frustrations can be transformed into healthy competition and creative expression. This book explores the origins, meaning, and forms of women's experience of their own aggression. Drawing from in-depth interviews with 60 women of different ages, and ethnic and class backgrounds, Dana Jack provides a rich account of how women explain (or explain away) their own feelings and acts of rage and violence. She shows the positive sides of women's aggression, and the potential for destructive aggression to be transformed. Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |