Cover image for Language of the Gun : Youth, Crime, and Public Policy.
Language of the Gun : Youth, Crime, and Public Policy.
Title:
Language of the Gun : Youth, Crime, and Public Policy.
Author:
Harcourt, Bernard E.
ISBN:
9780226316079
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (294 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Preface -- Part One: A Semiotic of the Gun -- 1. Catalina Mountain School, Tucson, Arizona -- 2. A Road Map of the Catalina Interviews -- 3. Symbolic Dimensions and Primary Meanings -- 4. Three Clusters of Primary Meanings -- 5. Placing the Clusters in Practice Contexts -- 6. The Sensual, Moral, and Political Dimensions of Guns -- Part Two: Exploring Methodological Sensibilities -- 7. Sartre and the Phenomenological Gaze -- 8. Lévi-Strauss and the Structural Map -- 9. Bourdieu and Practice Theory -- 10. Butler and the Performative -- 11. Embracing the Paradigm of Dirty Hands -- Part Three: Mapping Law and Public Policy -- 12. A Genealogy of the Youth Gun Field -- 13. The Landscape of Law and Public Policy -- 14. Leaps of Faith in Levitt and Bourgois -- 15. Making Ethical Choices in Law and Public Policy -- Acknowledgments -- Appendix: Treatment of Juvenile Records in State Sentencing -- Notes -- References -- Index.
Abstract:
Legal and public policies concerning youth gun violence tend to rely heavily on crime reports, survey data, and statistical methods. Rarely is attention given to the young voices belonging to those who carry high-powered semiautomatic handguns. In Language of the Gun, Bernard E. Harcourt recounts in-depth interviews with youths detained at an all-malecorrectional facility, exploring how they talk about guns and what meanings they ascribe to them in a broader attempt to understand some of the assumptions implicit in current handgun policies. In the process, Harcourt redraws the relationships among empirical research, law, and public policy.Home to over 150 repeat offenders ranging in age from twelve to seventeen, the Catalina Mountain School is made up of a particular stratum of boys-those who have committed the most offenses but will still be released upon reaching adulthood. In an effort to understand the symbolic and emotional language of guns and gun carrying, Harcourt interviewed dozens of these incarcerated Catalina boys. What do these youths see in guns? What draws them to handguns? Why do some of them carry and others not? For Harcourt, their often surprising answers unveil many of the presuppositions that influence our laws and policies.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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