ABSTRACT

In the current information age, Americans are bombarded daily with stories and images portraying a rising tide of violence. Drawing on media that includes television, newspaper, fiction, film, painting and photography, as well as interviews and focus groups, Karen Cerulo explores the ways in which individuals think about, depict and evaluate violence. Moving beyond typical studies that focus on violent story content, Deciphering Violence decodes the role of story structure itself and how the sequencing of facts can systematically influence our moral judgements of violent acts. The book identifies institutionalized forms of violent storytelling and raises new possibilities both for decreasing public tolerance of violence and increasing social control of the phenomenon.

chapter Chapter One|12 pages

New Thoughts on Violence

chapter Chapter Two|26 pages

Deciphering Violence

chapter Chapter Three|38 pages

The Cognitive Order of Right and Wrong

chapter Chapter Four|34 pages

Institutionalizing Right, Wrong, and Undecided

chapter Chapter Five|26 pages

Audience “Readings” of Violence

chapter Chapter Six|8 pages

Practical Applications and Scholarly Implications