Whitlock, Kay.

Considering hate : violence, goodness, and justice in American culture and politics / Kay Whitlock and Michael Bronski. - x, 174 pages ; 24 cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Dehumanization and violence -- Hate in the public imagination -- Boundaries, borders, and psychic shadows of hate -- Collective responsibility and moral disengagement -- Goodness in the public imagination.

"Hate haunts the human imagination. As a society, the United States has created a "hate frame" through which we view the world. It provides a concept, a language, and a set of cultural images and narratives that help us attribute motivation for violence, slot different segments of the population into tidy categories of "us" and "them," and justify enmity. Violence against marginalized and vulnerable communities - people of color, queers, women, people with disabilities, Muslims, and Jews - is said to be the result of hate, and the most popular remedy for it is more policing and harsher punishments. But is hate the right diagnosis for the violence that is so prevalent in American society? Does it help us reduce or prevent violence? How does it shape our understanding of innocence, guilt, and justice? How does it influence the way we assign people into the roles of "victim" and "perpetrator"? Considering Hate makes the case that the hate frame distorts our understanding of violence directed against vulnerable groups, obscures our ability to trace that violence to its sources, and impedes our ability to address the conditions that produce it. By anchoring us to simplistic political and cultural notions about violence and justice, the hate frame may do more harm than good."--Publisher information.

9780807091913 080709191X 9780807042953 0807042951

40024466829 40024470093

Random House Inc, Attn Order Entry 400 Hahn rd, Westminster, MD, USA, 21157 SAN 201-3975

2014017917

GBB4E4215 bnb


Hate--United States.
Violence--United States.
Discrimination--United States.
Multiculturalism--United States.
SOCIAL SCIENCE--Discrimination & Race Relations.
Discrimination.
Hate.
Multiculturalism.
Race relations.
Violence.


United States--Race relations.
United States.

HN90.M84 / W45 2015

303.60973