The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Coles

Loading Inventory...
Mass Public Shootings Neoliberal America: Killing for RecognitionMass Public Shootings Neoliberal America: Killing for RecognitionMass Public Shootings Neoliberal America: Killing for Recognition

Mass Public Shootings Neoliberal America: Killing for Recognition in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $281.50
Buy Online
Mass Public Shootings Neoliberal America: Killing for Recognition

Coles

Mass Public Shootings Neoliberal America: Killing for Recognition in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $281.50
Loading Inventory...

Size: Hardcover

Buy Online
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Why have mass public shootings in the United States become more frequent and lethal over the last two decades? This question cannot be answered by looking exclusively at the biographies, personalities, or mental health problems of individual shooters. Instead, to paraphrase C. Wright Mills, human behavior is never self-contained and must be understood at the intersection between the personal and social realms. Employing a sociological perspective and drawing from various data sources and case studies, this book offers a theoretical analysis of mass public shootings and the structural factors that drive these incidents. Our analysis highlights how neoliberalism-not simply as a set of pro-market policies but as an ideology and governing rationality-is linked to the mass shooting phenomenon in the United States. Since the late twentieth century, neoliberalism has not only heightened economic precarity and feelings of despair but also encouraged ruthlessness, ideological extremism, and the prioritization of personal aims over others' well-being. These tendencies have been amplified by digital technologies that encourage social isolation and egoistical forms of agency, all of which weaken social bonds, erode empathy, and drive some individuals to kill as an effort to seek respect and recognition-what the classical Greeks called "thymos"-in a society that strips them of their dignity and makes them feel devalued and irrelevant. This book will be an appropriate and useful supplementary text for various types of courses within sociology, criminology, and other social sciences that look at the social dimension of violence. In addition, the book should be of interest to a wider, non-academic audience that seeks a data-driven, sociological analysis of this phenomenon that is written in clear, accessible language.
Why have mass public shootings in the United States become more frequent and lethal over the last two decades? This question cannot be answered by looking exclusively at the biographies, personalities, or mental health problems of individual shooters. Instead, to paraphrase C. Wright Mills, human behavior is never self-contained and must be understood at the intersection between the personal and social realms. Employing a sociological perspective and drawing from various data sources and case studies, this book offers a theoretical analysis of mass public shootings and the structural factors that drive these incidents. Our analysis highlights how neoliberalism-not simply as a set of pro-market policies but as an ideology and governing rationality-is linked to the mass shooting phenomenon in the United States. Since the late twentieth century, neoliberalism has not only heightened economic precarity and feelings of despair but also encouraged ruthlessness, ideological extremism, and the prioritization of personal aims over others' well-being. These tendencies have been amplified by digital technologies that encourage social isolation and egoistical forms of agency, all of which weaken social bonds, erode empathy, and drive some individuals to kill as an effort to seek respect and recognition-what the classical Greeks called "thymos"-in a society that strips them of their dignity and makes them feel devalued and irrelevant. This book will be an appropriate and useful supplementary text for various types of courses within sociology, criminology, and other social sciences that look at the social dimension of violence. In addition, the book should be of interest to a wider, non-academic audience that seeks a data-driven, sociological analysis of this phenomenon that is written in clear, accessible language.

More About Coles at Village Green Shopping Centre

Find everything in-store including new, used and children’s books, music, movies, games and toys. Visit Coles today to find the perfect gift, or a novel for yourself. COVID-19 UPDATE: Open | Regular Centre Hours

Find Coles at Village Green Shopping Centre in Vernon, BC

Visit Coles at Village Green Shopping Centre in Vernon, BC
Powered by Adeptmind