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The social organization of masculine violence in nighttime leisure scenes

NCJ Number
311164
Journal
Criminal Justice Studies Volume: 28 Issue: 3 Dated: 2015 Pages: 239-256
Date Published
June 2015
Length
17 pages
Abstract

Recent scholarship on masculinity and crime suggests that men who have difficulty asserting their masculine status due to social marginalization (across age, class, and racial lines) have a higher likelihood of engaging in violent behavior to offset their lack of social power in other areas. While marginalization can abet the development of masculine violence, in this article I suggest more attention to the mitigating effects of structural changes and cultural contexts is necessary for a richer understanding of how masculine violence plays out. Drawing on multi-method ethnographic data from a case of one major US city with a thriving nighttime cultural economy, I aim to show how the structural characteristics of nighttime leisure scenes create situations for the enactment of particular forms of violence that reflect a number of subterranean convergences with the masculinization of the cultural economy.

(Publisher abstract provided.)

Date Published: June 1, 2015