Why Don't You Just Talk to Him? : The Politics of Domestic Abuse
Why Don't You Just Talk to Him? : The Politics of Domestic Abuse
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Author(s): Arnold, Kathleen R.
ISBN No.: 9780190262280
Pages: 280
Year: 201509
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 131.10
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (On Demand)

"The author's presentation of the philosophical and theoretical positions relevant to this issue is robust. The book is extensively referenced and adequately indexed. While the writing is clear and understandable, the content is complex and above the casual reader. For libraries supporting graduate programs in criminal justice, criminology, social work, psychology, sociology, and women's studies." -- R. T. Sigler, University of Alabama, CHOICE "In this extraordinary book, political philosopher Kathleen Arnold draws on feminist theory, personal experience and a wealth of research to show how family courts use Enlightenment values of rationality, mutuality, consent and egalitarianism to depoliticize women's claims of abuse, mask the injustices to which they've been subjected, perpetuate their condition of 'rightlessness,' and further entrench status quo gender roles and structures of subordination. A game-changer.


" --Evan Stark, author of Coercive Control: How Men Entrap Women in Personal Life "This book is essential reading for progressive social scientists seeking a rich theoretical understanding of violence against women. It is also a refreshing departure from analyses that reduce this harm to solely a property of the individual. Indeed, Kathleen R. Arnold provides us with a groundbreaking way of interpreting one of the world's most compelling social problems." --Walter S. DeKeseredy, Anna Deane Carlson Endowed Chair of Social Sciences, Director of the Research Center on Violence, and Professor of Sociology, West Virginia University "In her new book Kathleen Arnold reveals deep contradictions in America's approach to domestic abuse. These contradictions strip abused women of their effective rights to self-defense and unfettered movement-two preconditions of democratic liberty. Arnold deftly maps our collective blind spots on this topic.


Moreover, the insights she offers are important for creating new responses to domestic abuse that would be more in keeping with our cherished political ideals of justice and equality." --Edwina Barvosa, University of California, Santa Barbara.


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