ABSTRACT

This volume features the leading contemporary articles that are part of, or related to, the 'new masculinities' approach in this sphere. These comprise an impressive range of theoretical and empirical work including important cultural and ethnographic analyses. They emphasise the relationship between masculinities, the causes and patterns of most criminal offending and victimisation and the broader workings of the wider criminal justice system of policing (public and private), criminal courts, corrections and prisons. All of the material has been selected from flagship international journals and was produced by a global mix of male and female researchers with diverse disciplinary backgrounds. These scholars share the view that masculinities are plural, socially constructed, reproduced in the collective social practices of different men and embedded in institutional and occupational settings. Furthermore, masculinities are intricately linked with social struggles for power that occur between men and women and different men. Crime, criminal justice and their cultural representation are key terrain for these masculine contests and are always overlain with issues such as social class, age, race/ethnicity and sexuality.

part I|114 pages

Theoretical Perspectives

chapter 1|28 pages

Daubing the drudges of fury

Men, violence and the piety of the ‘hegemonic masculinity’ thesis

chapter 3|12 pages

On hegemonic masculinity and violence

Response to Jefferson and Hall

chapter 4|24 pages

Making bodies matter

Adolescent masculinities, the body, and varieties of violence

chapter 5|22 pages

After Dunblane

Crime, Corporeality, and the (Hetero-) Sexing of the Bodies of Men

part II|132 pages

The Spectrum of Masculine Crime

chapter 7|16 pages

Assault on Men

Masculinity and Male Victimization

chapter 8|16 pages

Enacting Masculinity

Antigay Violence and Group Rape as Participatory Theater

chapter 10|22 pages

Managing to Kill

Masculinities and the Space Shuttle Challenger Explosion

chapter 11|34 pages

Criminal careers, desistance and subjectivity

Interpreting men’s narratives of change

part III|110 pages

Cultural And Ethnographic Analyses

chapter 12|14 pages

Masculinity and Heroism in the Hollywood ‘Blockbuster’

The Culture Industry and Contemporary Images of Crime and Law Enforcement

chapter 13|18 pages

In Search of the High Life

Drugs, Crime, Masculinities and Consumption

chapter 14|16 pages

In Search of Masculinity

Violence, Respect and Sexuality among Puerto Rican Crack Dealers in East Harlem

chapter 15|16 pages

‘Boozers and Bouncers’

Masculine Conflict, Disengagement and the Contemporary Governance of Drinking-Related Violence and Disorder

chapter 16|22 pages

Hard men, shop boys and others

Embodying competence in a masculinist occupation

chapter 17|22 pages

‘Ducktails, Flick-knives and Pugnacity’

Subcultural and Hegemonic Masculinities in South Africa, 1948–1960

part IV|124 pages

Criminal Justice Settings

chapter 18|22 pages

There Oughtta Be a Law Against Bitches’

Masculinity Lessons in Police Academy Training

chapter 19|20 pages

Men Behind Bars

“Doing” Masculinity as an Adaptation to Imprisonment

chapter 20|26 pages

Snakes And Ladders

Upper-Middle Class Male Offenders Talk About Economic Crime*

chapter 21|14 pages

Managing Marginalised Masculinities

men and probation

chapter 22|40 pages

Towards Safer Societies

Punishment, Masculinities and Violence Against Women