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Murder Town Usa Homicide Structural Violence And Activism In Wilmington Yasser Arafat Payne Brooklynn K Hitchens Darryl L Chambers

  • SKU: BELL-52104174
Murder Town Usa Homicide Structural Violence And Activism In Wilmington Yasser Arafat Payne Brooklynn K Hitchens Darryl L Chambers
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Murder Town Usa Homicide Structural Violence And Activism In Wilmington Yasser Arafat Payne Brooklynn K Hitchens Darryl L Chambers instant download after payment.

Publisher: Rutgers University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.25 MB
Pages: 312
Author: Yasser Arafat Payne; Brooklynn K. Hitchens; Darryl L. Chambers
ISBN: 9781978817401, 1978817401
Language: English
Year: 2023

Product desciption

Murder Town Usa Homicide Structural Violence And Activism In Wilmington Yasser Arafat Payne Brooklynn K Hitchens Darryl L Chambers by Yasser Arafat Payne; Brooklynn K. Hitchens; Darryl L. Chambers 9781978817401, 1978817401 instant download after payment.

Far too many poor Black communities struggle with gun violence and homicide. The result has been the unnatural contortion of Black families and the inter-generational perpetuation of social chaos and untimely death. Young people are repeatedly ripped away from life by violence, while many men are locked away in prisons. In neighborhoods like those of Wilmington, Delaware, residents routinely face the pressures of violence, death, and incarceration. Murder Town, USA is thus a timely ethnography with an innovative structure: the authors helped organize fifteen residents formerly involved with the streets and/or the criminal justice system to document the relationship between structural opportunity and experiences with violence in Wilmington's Eastside and Southbridge neighborhoods.
Earlier scholars offered rich cultural analysis of violence in low-income Black communities, and yet this literature has mostly conceptualized violence through frameworks of personal responsibility or individual accountability. And even if acknowledging the pressure of structural inequality, most earlier researchers describe violence as the ultimate result of some moral failing, a propensity for crime, and the notion of helplessness. Instead, in Murder Town USA, Payne, Hitchens, and Chamber, along with their collaborative team of street ethnographers, instead offer a radical re-conceptualization of violence in low-income Black communities by describing the penchant for violence and involvement in crime overall to be a logical, "resilient" response to the perverse context of structural inequality.

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