Gender, Heterosexuality, and Youth Violence: The Struggle for Recognition

Author:   James W. Messerschmidt
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9781442213715


Pages:   218
Publication Date:   08 March 2012
Recommended Age:   From 18 to 22 years
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Gender, Heterosexuality, and Youth Violence: The Struggle for Recognition


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Full Product Details

Author:   James W. Messerschmidt
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.336kg
ISBN:  

9781442213715


ISBN 10:   144221371
Pages:   218
Publication Date:   08 March 2012
Recommended Age:   From 18 to 22 years
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: Theory and Method Chapter 3: Assaultive Violence Chapter 4: Sexual Violence Chapter 5: Nonviolence Chapter 6: Conclusion Notes References Index

Reviews

Messerschmidt's timely and thoughtful book relies on life history methods to illuminate patterns that lead boys and girls to become physically or sexually violent or to behave in deliberately nonviolent ways. The book is organized around physical violence, sexual violence, and nonviolence and features a case-study boy and girl for each chapter. Well grounded in feminist criminology, the use of the voices of young men and women makes the theory come alive. In addition to the interesting relationships that Messerschmidt (Univ. of Southern Maine) explores (e.g., the relationship between household and school, gender, adherence to traditional gender role ideologies), he focuses on bullying, especially bullying that punishes gender nonconformity. In light of the attention being paid to bullying, this book provides the after story, in addition to suicide, of which everyone is aware: bullying, especially when it is not interrupted by parental support, leads to physical and sexual violence being perpetrated by the victim of the bullying. Summing Up: Highly recommended. CHOICE Most research on youth and crime emphasize the categorical differences among various violent crimes. In his unsparing yet sympathetic analysis, James Messerschmidt lays out a continuum of youth violence that embraces everything from schoolyard bullying to sexual assault. By focusing on commonalities, while remaining sensitive to important differences, Messerschmidt reframes the issue, and thus sets a new agenda for social scientists and criminologists for decades to come. -- Michael Kimmel, Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Stony Brook University Sexuality has been largely closeted in criminological theory until now. In this book, Messerschmidt centers sexuality and hetero-normativity in theorizing boys' and girls' use of assaultive and sexual violence. These six life histories of adolescent male and female offenders reveal the interwoven social constructions of gender, sexuality, bodies, and context in life paths that produce repeated violent or sexual offenses. The findings underline the inadequacy of gender analyses alone. Sexuality and the body must be brought into the picture and Messerschmidt leads the way. -- Nancy Jurik, Arizona State University Where questions about crime meet with questions about gender, power, youth and social change, James Messerschmidt is one of our most creative researchers. In this new book, with closely observed case studies of young people's lives, he takes us inside the dilemmas of making masculinity and femininity, with growing bodies that are often far from the plastic-doll norms of mass culture. He shows us how violence and sexual abuse may arise in both expected and unexpected ways. For anyone concerned with youth crime, with gender justice, or with the epidemic of bullying in schools, this book will be of great value. -- Raewyn Connell, University of Sydney, author of Masculinities Messerschmidt's comparisons between boys and girls are an important addition to current gender scholarship, which overwhelmingly examines either boys and men or girls and women. The first two chapters of the book offer an overview of the fields of gender, sexuality, and criminology that will be invaluable for those unfamiliar with the fields American Journal of Sociology [T]his book adds to this body of literature by introducing the unique point of view of boys and girls who engage in 'reactive bullying' (61)-when the victim of bullying engages in his/her own aggressive and violent behavior in reaction to this victimization. Qualitative Sociology


Messerschmidt's timely and thoughtful book relies on life history methods to illuminate patterns that lead boys and girls to become physically or sexually violent or to behave in deliberately nonviolent ways. The book is organized around physical violence, sexual violence, and nonviolence and features a case-study boy and girl for each chapter. Well grounded in feminist criminology, the use of the voices of young men and women makes the theory come alive. In addition to the interesting relationships that Messerschmidt (Univ. of Southern Maine) explores (e.g., the relationship between household and school, gender, adherence to traditional gender role ideologies), he focuses on bullying, especially bullying that punishes gender nonconformity. In light of the attention being paid to bullying, this book provides the after story, in addition to suicide, of which everyone is aware: bullying, especially when it is not interrupted by parental support, leads to physical and sexual violence being perpetrated by the victim of the bullying. Summing Up: Highly recommended. CHOICE Most research on youth and crime emphasize the categorical differences among various violent crimes. In his unsparing yet sympathetic analysis, James Messerschmidt lays out a continuum of youth violence that embraces everything from schoolyard bullying to sexual assault. By focusing on commonalities, while remaining sensitive to important differences, Messerschmidt reframes the issue, and thus sets a new agenda for social scientists and criminologists for decades to come. -- Michael Kimmel, Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Stony Brook University Sexuality has been largely closeted in criminological theory until now. In this book, Messerschmidt centers sexuality and hetero-normativity in theorizing boys' and girls' use of assaultive and sexual violence. These six life histories of adolescent male and female offenders reveal the interwoven social constructions of gender, sexuality, bodies, and context in life paths that produce repeated violent or sexual offenses. The findings underline the inadequacy of gender analyses alone. Sexuality and the body must be brought into the picture and Messerschmidt leads the way. -- Nancy Jurik, Arizona State University Where questions about crime meet with questions about gender, power, youth and social change, James Messerschmidt is one of our most creative researchers. In this new book, with closely observed case studies of young people's lives, he takes us inside the dilemmas of making masculinity and femininity, with growing bodies that are often far from the plastic-doll norms of mass culture. He shows us how violence and sexual abuse may arise in both expected and unexpected ways. For anyone concerned with youth crime, with gender justice, or with the epidemic of bullying in schools, this book will be of great value. -- Raewyn Connell, University of Sydney, author of Masculinities Messerschmidt's comparisons between boys and girls are an important addition to current gender scholarship, which overwhelmingly examines either boys and men or girls and women. The first two chapters of the book offer an overview of the fields of gender, sexuality, and criminology that will be invaluable for those unfamiliar with the fields American Journal of Sociology


Sexuality has been largely closeted in criminological theory until now. In this book, Messerschmidt centers sexuality and hetero-normativity in theorizing boys' and girls' use of assaultive and sexual violence. These six life histories of adolescent male and female offenders reveal the interwoven social constructions of gender, sexuality, bodies, and context in life paths that produce repeated violent or sexual offenses. The findings underline the inadequacy of gender analyses alone. Sexuality and the body must be brought into the picture and Messerschmidt leads the way.--Jurik, Nancy


Most research on youth and crime emphasize the categorical differences among various violent crimes. In his unsparing yet sympathetic analysis, James Messerschmidt lays out a continuum of youth violence that embraces everything from schoolyard bullying to sexual assault. By focusing on commonalities, while remaining sensitive to important differences, Messerschmidt reframes the issue, and thus sets a new agenda for social scientists and criminologists for decades to come. -- Kimmel, Michael Sexuality has been largely closeted in criminological theory until now. In this book, Messerschmidt centers sexuality and hetero-normativity in theorizing boys' and girls' use of assaultive and sexual violence. These six life histories of adolescent male and female offenders reveal the interwoven social constructions of gender, sexuality, bodies, and context in life paths that produce repeated violent or sexual offenses. The findings underline the inadequacy of gender analyses alone. Sexuality and the body must be brought into the picture and Messerschmidt leads the way. -- Jurik, Nancy


Author Information

James W. Messerschmidt is professor of sociology and chair of the criminology department at the University of Southern Maine, where he also teaches in the women's and gender studies program. He is the author or coauthor of a number of books, including Masculinities and Crime and Criminology.

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