Teaching Fear: How We Learn to Fear Crime and Why It Matters
Autor Nicole E. Raderen Limba Engleză Paperback – 6 ian 2023
Based on in-depth research and family studies, Rader reveals the dubious and dangerous origins of many of the most prominent safety guidelines that teach young girls to be more afraid of crime. These guidelines carry over to adulthood, influencing women’s behaviors and the way they order their worlds, with dangerous consequences. As women teach their learned behavior and conditioned fear to others, gendered crime myths are recirculated from generation to generation, making them a staple in our society.
Teaching Fear includes suggestions for taking precautionary measures and crime prevention strategies. Rader also provides guidance for instilling safety values and demonstrating how we can “teach fear better” to break this cycle and truly create greater security.
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
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Paperback (1) | 202.44 lei 43-57 zile | |
Temple University Press – 6 ian 2023 | 202.44 lei 43-57 zile | |
Hardback (1) | 579.53 lei 43-57 zile | |
Temple University Press – 22 ian 2023 | 579.53 lei 43-57 zile |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781439921036
ISBN-10: 1439921032
Pagini: 233
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Editura: Temple University Press
Colecția Temple University Press
ISBN-10: 1439921032
Pagini: 233
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Editura: Temple University Press
Colecția Temple University Press
Recenzii
“In Teaching Fear, Nicole Rader brings together what we know about contemporary fears of violence and victimization. She shows how our fears are created, why they take the forms they do, how they shape the lives of children and adults, and how we can approach our fears in more constructive ways.”—Joel Best, Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice at the University of Delaware, and author of American Nightmares: Social Problems in an Anxious World
“Can a book about gendered fear of crime be an enjoyable read? If the book is Teaching Fear, the answer is yes. Written in a highly accessible style but grounded firmly in empirical research, Teaching Fear provides a much-needed debunking of popular gendered and racialized crime myths and offers strategies for finally ending the intergenerational transmission of these false and harmful beliefs."—Claire Renzetti, Judi Conway Patton Endowed Chair and Professor of Sociology at the University of Kentucky, and author of Feminist Criminology
"Girls are taught to be afraid of a variety of things from a very young age and thus grow up living a much narrower world compared to males.... This book is extremely helpful for understanding how the media, schools, and the criminal justice system perpetuate these fears, which can seriously impede peoples', particularly women's, lives. Rader strives to make readers understand that these fears frequently center on both specific races and the female gender.... Summing Up: Highly recommended."—Choice
“Rader does an excellent job at highlighting how the intersection of ideas about race and gender deeply shape how we understand crime. She explains this dynamic clearly and simply without losing any of the important nuances.... [I]t is an important contribution to the scholarly literature on the social reproduction of crime myths, especially gendered ones."—Social Forces
"Rader tackles the connection between fearful fictions about crime in the U.S. that she believes are designed to keep women, in particular, docile and afraid, and the real issues that greatly affect not just women but all Americans.... Rader explores how these stories are inculcated in U.S. society and the consequences that result when these often racist and/or gendered myths are internalized.... VERDICT Recommended for educators, parents, and readers interested in gender identity, politics, and law."—Library Journal
"Rader offers a well-researched and thoughtful exploration into how it is we come to fear the threat of victimization.... [S]he highlights how crime myths are taught and perpetuated through the media, parenting, schools, and the criminal justice system.... What is important to point out, and Rader does such a great job of doing so, is how fear of crime is a gendered phenomenon, considered a 'woman’s issue.'... She encourages us to teach that we are all worthy victims of crime, regardless of our gender or race.... [Rader] offers an invaluable tool for us to learn from and use as we begin to dispel crime myths and the fears they create as we encounter an ever-changing social world."—ACJS Today
"Rader addresses several sociological questions related to fear of crime.... Among the most compelling points made in the book is the extent to which, as self-described, women engage in daily practices that curtail their own freedom of movement and agency out of fear of crime and offload the responsibility for ‘fear work’ to male relatives and partners.... She provides interesting interviews with women and children that provide unique insights into the social learning component to fear."—Contemporary Sociology
"Teaching Fear is an important contribution to the scholarly literature on the social reproduction of crime myths and offers a sharp analysis of how fear of crime works to limit women’s activity and reproduce gender inequality. It provides a critical foundation for anyone interested in interrogating contemporary fears of victimization and identifying the ways such false beliefs inform our behaviors and policies.”—Gender and Society
“Can a book about gendered fear of crime be an enjoyable read? If the book is Teaching Fear, the answer is yes. Written in a highly accessible style but grounded firmly in empirical research, Teaching Fear provides a much-needed debunking of popular gendered and racialized crime myths and offers strategies for finally ending the intergenerational transmission of these false and harmful beliefs."—Claire Renzetti, Judi Conway Patton Endowed Chair and Professor of Sociology at the University of Kentucky, and author of Feminist Criminology
"Girls are taught to be afraid of a variety of things from a very young age and thus grow up living a much narrower world compared to males.... This book is extremely helpful for understanding how the media, schools, and the criminal justice system perpetuate these fears, which can seriously impede peoples', particularly women's, lives. Rader strives to make readers understand that these fears frequently center on both specific races and the female gender.... Summing Up: Highly recommended."—Choice
“Rader does an excellent job at highlighting how the intersection of ideas about race and gender deeply shape how we understand crime. She explains this dynamic clearly and simply without losing any of the important nuances.... [I]t is an important contribution to the scholarly literature on the social reproduction of crime myths, especially gendered ones."—Social Forces
"Rader tackles the connection between fearful fictions about crime in the U.S. that she believes are designed to keep women, in particular, docile and afraid, and the real issues that greatly affect not just women but all Americans.... Rader explores how these stories are inculcated in U.S. society and the consequences that result when these often racist and/or gendered myths are internalized.... VERDICT Recommended for educators, parents, and readers interested in gender identity, politics, and law."—Library Journal
"Rader offers a well-researched and thoughtful exploration into how it is we come to fear the threat of victimization.... [S]he highlights how crime myths are taught and perpetuated through the media, parenting, schools, and the criminal justice system.... What is important to point out, and Rader does such a great job of doing so, is how fear of crime is a gendered phenomenon, considered a 'woman’s issue.'... She encourages us to teach that we are all worthy victims of crime, regardless of our gender or race.... [Rader] offers an invaluable tool for us to learn from and use as we begin to dispel crime myths and the fears they create as we encounter an ever-changing social world."—ACJS Today
"Rader addresses several sociological questions related to fear of crime.... Among the most compelling points made in the book is the extent to which, as self-described, women engage in daily practices that curtail their own freedom of movement and agency out of fear of crime and offload the responsibility for ‘fear work’ to male relatives and partners.... She provides interesting interviews with women and children that provide unique insights into the social learning component to fear."—Contemporary Sociology
"Teaching Fear is an important contribution to the scholarly literature on the social reproduction of crime myths and offers a sharp analysis of how fear of crime works to limit women’s activity and reproduce gender inequality. It provides a critical foundation for anyone interested in interrogating contemporary fears of victimization and identifying the ways such false beliefs inform our behaviors and policies.”—Gender and Society
Notă biografică
Nicole E. Rader is a Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology at Mississippi State University. She is the coauthor of Fear of Crime in the United States: Causes, Consequences, and Contradictions.
Descriere
How rules about safety and the fear of crime are learned and crystalized into crime myths especially for women