definition

  • Includes censorship
    • “Undue alteration (as of wording or sense in editing a text)” — Merriam-Webster

theories

  • Biological approach
    • Predisposition approach
    • Gendered
  • Psychological approach
    • Abuse
    • Neglect
    • Personal histories
  • Sociological analysis
    • Race
    • Class
    • Gender
      • Patriarchy

categories

  • Law
    • Lawful
    • Unlawful
  • Rationale
    • Senseless
      • Mental illness or pathology
      • Extreme inhumanity
    • Legitimate
      • State-sanctioned
        • Genocide → senseless in retrospect
      • Punishment, power, control
      • Defense, resistance
      • Entertainment
  • Levels
    • Subjective: visible with clearly identified agent
    • Symbolic: language and structures of discourse (e.g. flying Nazi flag — pressure and push to other)
    • Systemic: naturalized, invisible and sustains dominant sociocultural order (e.g. prison systems, patriarchy)

social theory

  • Violence occurs as society breaks down (Delanty)
  • Violence as core to social bonding (Girard)
    • Sacred rituals
    • Prohibitive laws for order
  • Violence monopolized by the state (Giddens)
    • Military power
    • Civic pacification

power

  • Violence can never generate power (Arendt)
    • Violence is “hope of those who have no power”
  • Violence can be a source of power (Ray)
    • “Underside of power” (Foucault)
  • Encoded systems of normativity: justifications for violence
    • Reasoning
    • Revolution or self-defense
    • Achieving status, land, or goods

socially organized

  • Violence and its reactions (e.g. war and trauma) can create social bonding
  • “Civilization process” (Elias)
    • Social interdependence → state’s monopoly on means of violence
  • Privitization of violence (Cooney)
    • Restraint on public violence → increase in intimate-familial violence
    • Rise and fall because of real causality or because its being talked about more and recorded more?
  • Modes of discipline (Foucault)
    • Prison system, social control
  • Visible forms of violence
    • “Peace lines”, DMZ
    • Symbolic

state violence

types

  • Used in conjunction in authoritarian states
  • Instrumental violence: to achieve a goal
    • Direct targeting and neutralizing of threats or challenges
    • Rebels, rival authorities
    • e.g. Rounding up communists for detention or execution
  • Exemplary violence: to stop others from committing similar “crimes”
    • Propaganda, surveillance, suppression of speech
    • Primary targets and secondary audiences (those who learn)
    • Instructing through negative examples