Masculinity, sexuality and hate-motivated violence: The case of darren

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Abstract

In this paper I use the case study of Darren, derived from two interviews in a research study of racism in the city of Stoke, UK (Gadd, Dixon and Jefferson 2005; Gadd and Dixon 2011), to explore how best to approach the topic of hate-motivated violence. This entails discussing the relationships among racism (the original object of study), hate-motivated violence (the more general term) and prejudices of various sorts. Because that discussion, I argue, justifies a psychoanalytic starting point, and since violence has become, almost quintessentially, masculine, this leads on to an exploration of what can be learnt from psychoanalysis about the relations among sexuality, masculinity, hatred and violence. This involves brief discussions of some key psychoanalytic terms, but only what is needed to enable sense to be made of my chosen case, which I shall then interrogate using these psychoanalytic ideas, focused on understanding the origins and nature of Darrens hatred.

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APA

Jefferson, T. (2013). Masculinity, sexuality and hate-motivated violence: The case of darren. In International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy (Vol. 2, pp. 3–14). Queensland University of Technology. https://doi.org/10.5204/ijcjsd.v2i3.119

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