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Revolutionary Suicide and Other Desperate Measur – Narratives of Youth and Violence from Japan and the United States

Autor Adrienne Carey Hurley
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 sep 2011
In Revolutionary Suicide and Other Desperate Measures, Adrienne Carey Hurley examines how child abuse and youth violence are understood, manufactured, and represented, but still disavowed, in Japan and the United States. Through analysis of autobiographical fiction, journalism, film, and clinical case studies, she charts a “culture of child abuse” extending from the home to the classroom, the marketplace, and the streets in both countries. Hurley served as a court-appointed special advocate for abused children, and she brings that perspective to bear as she interprets texts. Undertaking close reading as a form of advocacy, she exposes how late capitalist societies abuse and exploit youth, while at the same time blaming them for their own vulnerability and violence. She objects to rote designations of youth violence as “inexplicable,” arguing that such formulaic responses forestall understanding and intervention. Hurley foregrounds theories of youth violence that locate its origins in childhood trauma, considers what happens when young people are denied opportunities to develop a political analysis to explain their rage, and explores how the chance to engage in such an analysis affects the occurrence and meaning of youth violence.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822349617
ISBN-10: 0822349612
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 1 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press

Cuprins

Acknowledgments; IntroductionPart 1“Livid with History”: An Introduction to Part 1; 1. Survivor Discourse, the Limits of Objectivity, and Orpha; 2. Shizuko, the Silent Girl: Uchida Shungiku’s Fazaa Fakkaa; 3. “Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean”: Dorothy Allison’s Bastard out of CarolinaPart 2The Message: An Introduction to Part 2; 4. Engendering First World Fears: The Teenager and the Terrorist; 5. “Killer Kids” and “Cutters”; 6. The Fiction of Hoshino Tomoyuki and Japanarchy 2K: Lonely Hearts Revolution; Conclusion: A Case for ReparationsAppendix; Notes; Bibliography; Index

Recenzii

“Organizing her work around children and youth, Adrienne Carey Hurley opens up new ways of conducting cross-culture work between Japan and the United States. Instead of comparing national cultures and negotiating similarities and differences, Hurley effectively shows how the appetite for representational violence (that necessarily relates to the experience of real violence shared by many youth in Japan and the United States) must be studied as a single phenomenon, one that cannot be split up, and thus neutralized, by over-emphasis on national particularities.” Eric Cazdyn, author of The Flash of Capital: Film and Geopolitics in Japan“This is one of the most unsettling scholarly works I have ever read. Adrienne Carey Hurley has produced a far-reaching, audacious meditation on violence that cannot be reconciled with existing therapeutic regimes, adult-centered political movements, or progressive antiviolence agendas. Her willingness to move her analysis across texts, state geographies, institutional forms, historical contexts, and racial subjectivities is awe-inspiring. It is no exaggeration to say that my political identity has been permanently altered by this book.”—Dylan Rodríguez, author of Suspended Apocalypse: White Supremacy, Genocide, and the Filipino Condition

Notă biografică


Descriere

Examines how child abuse and youth violence are understood, manufactured, and represented, but still disavowed, in Japan and the United States