The Cambridge World History of Violence
Jay Winter editor Louise Edwards editor Nigel Penn editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:26th Mar '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The first book to present a global, cross-cultural, historical perspective on violence since 1800, its deep social significances and representations.
Why do humans continue to inflict both mass and interpersonal violence upon each other? This comprehensive, global study examines violence and its consequences as produced in nation-states, colonies, institutions, and families alongside analyses of its commemoration and representation and significance in leisure.This book explores one of the most intractable problems of human existence - our propensity to inflict violence. It provides readers with case studies of political, social, economic, religious, structural and interpersonal violence from across the entire globe since 1800. It also examines the changing representations of violence in diverse media and the cultural significance of its commemoration. Together, the chapters provide in-depth understanding of the ways that humans have perpetrated violence, justified its use, attempted to contain its spread and narrated the stories of its impacts. Readers also gain insight into the mechanisms by which the parameters about the acceptable limits to and locations of violence have dramatically altered over the course of a few decades. Leading experts from around the world have pooled their knowledge to provide concise, authoritative examinations of the complex phenomenon of human violence. Annotated bibliographies provide overviews of the shape of the research field.
ISBN: 9781107151567
Dimensions: 235mm x 160mm x 37mm
Weight: 1220g
694 pages