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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Cathy WinklerPublisher: AltaMira Press Imprint: AltaMira Press Dimensions: Width: 15.90cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.10cm Weight: 0.612kg ISBN: 9780759101203ISBN 10: 0759101205 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 07 May 2002 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() 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 ContentsPart 1 Raped Once, Physical Rape Chapter 1 Another Rape Saga Part 2 Raped Twice, Social Rape Chapter 2 Rape as Social Murder Chapter 3 Traumatized Evidence Part 3 Raped a Third Time, Legal Rape Chapter 4 Chasing the Rapist Chapter 5 It Was Just One Night Chapter 9 Treating Trauma Chapter 10 Confronting Institutional Barriers Chapter 11 Judging Civil Justice Chapter 13 Looking for Justice Chapter 14 Confronting Status, not Justice Chapter 15 Publicizing the Pain Chapter 16 Judging Criminal Justice 17 Epilogue: Raped Three TimesReviewsCathy Winkler should be commended for her sustained courage and determination to seek justice and raise awareness of the multiple facets and phases of rape. Her ethnographically-rich criminological insights are powerful. She tells a compelling story and offers a penetrating cultural critique of our society and its criminal (in)justice system. Her expose of the discrimination she faced is simply poignant.--Harrison, Faye V. In this startling and brave personal examination of rape and its aftermath, Cathy Winkler asserts her own truth of sexual victimization and analyzes the ways in which a range of others make sense of the rape event and of her efforts to pursue justice...One Night makes important substantive contributions to the social science literature on rape and rape processing...Winkler's phenomenological account of her rape trauma will be useful to counselors and legal personnel...its value as an empirical contribution to the fields of sociology and anthropology cannot be overestimated. It would be a good addition to courses on the criminal justice processes, women's studies, criminology, and the sociology of emotion. -- Amanda Konradi, Ohio University Contemporary Sociology One night in September 1987, a rapist broke into the home of anthropologist Cathy Winkler and kicked her awake. Her narration of the seven year saga that began that night and ended in a courtroom constitutes a unique social and personal chronicle of the subtle and not so subtle ways in which women raped are debased in their pursuit of justice. It is a riveting tale, told in the true crime mode with the kind of attention to social detail only a professional anthropologist could supply. Cathy emerges as a modern American heroine, and her story will surely become an anthropological classic. -- Peggy Reeves Sanday, (University of Pennsylvania, author of Fraternity Gang Rape) ...horrific, farcical, tragic, incisive and inspiring...Winkler's innovative style is highly effective...[she] makes important contributions to social theorizing about culture even as she adds significantly to a much-needed substantive literature on the lived experiences of VISAs (Victim as Survivor and Activist)...[The] elements combine to create a compelling saga and analysis that has the potential to inform, educate, and moblize diverse audiences...Winkler documents [her experience] brilliantly and in doing so adds tremendously to scholarship in this area. -- Jennifer Dunn, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale American Ethnologist, Vol. 30, No. 4, August 2003 Cathy Winkler should be commended for her sustained courage and determination to seek justice and raise awareness of the multiple facets and phases of rape. Her ethnographically-rich criminological insights are powerful. She tells a compelling story and offers a penetrating cultural critique of our society and its criminal (in)justice system. Her expose of the discrimination she faced is simply poignant. -- Faye V. Harrison, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign In this startling and brave personal examination of rape and its aftermath, Cathy Winkler asserts her own truth of sexual victimization and analyzes the ways in which a range of others make sense of the rape event and of her efforts to pursue justice...One Night makes important substantive contributions to the social science literature on rape and rape processing...Winkler's phenomenological account of her rape trauma will be useful to counselors and legal personnel...its value as an empirical contribution to the fields of sociology and anthropology cannot be overestimated. It would be a good addition to courses on the criminal justice processes, women's studies, criminology, and the sociology of emotion. -- Amanda Konradi, Ohio University Contemporary Sociology One night in September 1987, a rapist broke into the home of anthropologist Cathy Winkler and kicked her awake. Her narration of the seven year saga that began that night and ended in a courtroom constitutes a unique social and personal chronicle of the subtle and not so subtle ways in which women raped are debased in their pursuit of justice. It is a riveting tale, told in the true crime mode with the kind of attention to social detail only a professional anthropologist could supply. Cathy emerges as a modern American heroine, and her story will surely become an anthropological classic. -- Peggy Reeves Sanday, (University of Pennsylvania, author of Fraternity Gang Rape) ...horrific, farcical, tragic, incisive and inspiring...Winkler's innovative style is highly effective...[she] makes important contributions to social theorizing about culture even as she adds significantly to a much-needed substantive literature on the lived experiences of VISAs (Victim as Survivor and Activist)...[The] elements combine to create a compelling saga and analysis that has the potential to inform, educate, and moblize diverse audiences...Winkler documents [her experience] brilliantly and in doing so adds tremendously to scholarship in this area. -- Jennifer Dunn, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale American Ethnologist, Vol. 30, No. 4, August 2003 Cathy Winkler should be commended for her sustained courage and determination to seek justice and raise awareness of the multiple facets and phases of rape. Her ethnographically-rich criminological insights are powerful. She tells a compelling story and offers a penetrating cultural critique of our society and its criminal (in)justice system. Her expose of the discrimination she faced is simply poignant. -- Faye V. Harrison, University of Florida Author InformationCathy Winkler is a cultural anthropologist and rape-survivor activist in Virginia, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |