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Why Girls Fight

Female Youth Violence in the Inner City

Cindy D Ness author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:New York University Press

Published:1st Aug '10

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Why Girls Fight cover

A fresh perspective on the issues behind everyday street fighting among urban girls.

In low-income U.S. cities, street fights between teenage girls are common. These fights take place at school, on street corners, or in parks, when one girl provokes another to the point that she must either “step up” or be labeled a “punk.” Typically, when girls engage in violence that is not strictly self-defense, they are labeled “delinquent,” their actions taken as a sign of emotional pathology. However, in Why Girls Fight, Cindy D. Ness demonstrates that in poor urban areas this kind of street fighting is seen as a normal part of girlhood and a necessary way to earn respect among peers, as well as a way for girls to attain a sense of mastery and self-esteem in a social setting where legal opportunities for achievement are not otherwise easily available.
Ness spent almost two years in west and northeast Philadelphia to get a sense of how teenage girls experience inflicting physical harm and the meanings they assign to it. While most existing work on girls’ violence deals exclusively with gangs, Ness sheds new light on the everyday street fighting of urban girls, arguing that different cultural standards associated with race and class influence the relationship that girls have to physical aggression.

Ness's interdisciplinary approach to the subject of street fighting among young women effectively orchestrates a dialogue between cultural, social-institutional, and psychological-theoretical analyses. -- Aimee Meredith Cox * Signs *
Ness's book is well written, well organized, and thought provoking. The interdisciplinary foundation to her work offers insight and explanation that few other studies of its kind have conveyed. -- Lisa Pasko * American Journal of Sociology *
Psychologist Ness offers compelling evidence for the cultural and structural reasons why inner-city girls fight. * Choice Magazine *
This is a scholarly book in which a case is made for the heretofore undocumented reasons why girls maintain a fighting stance both in school and in the streets . . . The ten pages of references attest to the academically rigorous research that went into thisground-breaking book. -- Peggy Flemming * VOYA Library Magazine *

ISBN: 9780814758410

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 272g

198 pages