Access restricted to the OSU CommunityThis project relates the experience of violence to self-identity. It involves a systematic content analysis of memoirs published on rape, terrorism, genocide, and war. The content analysis provided a complex typology of traumatic stressors that is general to the instances of violence considered. The typology is a style of formal sociology comparable to what has been termed social pattern analysis (Zerubavel 2007). The identified stressors are as follows: the symbolic and cognitive expansion of violence, the loss of self-propriety during violent physical exchanges, the frustration of mundane choices and routines, and the blurring of moral and cognitive boundaries. A theoretical description was fit to the...
Introduction: Given the argument about different perspectives on the concept of trauma, the authors ...
ABSTRACT: This article describes the criminogenic process and the social implications of psychologic...
ABSTRACT Violence confronts us increasingly, everywhere: how are we to make sense of it? Its ubiquit...
Current models of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) represent significant advances in our underst...
Overcoming actual violence is the driving, although hidden force behind modern modes of thought and ...
© BEIESP. Researchers agree that the reasons for the trauma are the sudden radical changes taking pl...
This paper outlines case studies of two men who were subjected to abuse during their childhood. Soci...
This paper outlines case studies of two men who were subjected to abuse during their childhood. Soci...
This paper draws together elements of cultural sociology and theoretical psychoanalysis in order to ...
My research aims to examine the self-perceptions of males with a history of interpartner violence an...
Different forms of trauma shape our perception of the social reality, ranging from sexual violence i...
In this chapter, the author reflects on secondary and, to a lesser extent, vicarious trauma among de...
This paper sets out to analyse victimhood as an identity marker after experiences of sexual victimiz...
Throughout history, humans have frequently carried out harmful actions against one another. Often, t...
Trauma is a concept widely recognized, explored, and dissected by scholars, clinicians, and everyday...
Introduction: Given the argument about different perspectives on the concept of trauma, the authors ...
ABSTRACT: This article describes the criminogenic process and the social implications of psychologic...
ABSTRACT Violence confronts us increasingly, everywhere: how are we to make sense of it? Its ubiquit...
Current models of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) represent significant advances in our underst...
Overcoming actual violence is the driving, although hidden force behind modern modes of thought and ...
© BEIESP. Researchers agree that the reasons for the trauma are the sudden radical changes taking pl...
This paper outlines case studies of two men who were subjected to abuse during their childhood. Soci...
This paper outlines case studies of two men who were subjected to abuse during their childhood. Soci...
This paper draws together elements of cultural sociology and theoretical psychoanalysis in order to ...
My research aims to examine the self-perceptions of males with a history of interpartner violence an...
Different forms of trauma shape our perception of the social reality, ranging from sexual violence i...
In this chapter, the author reflects on secondary and, to a lesser extent, vicarious trauma among de...
This paper sets out to analyse victimhood as an identity marker after experiences of sexual victimiz...
Throughout history, humans have frequently carried out harmful actions against one another. Often, t...
Trauma is a concept widely recognized, explored, and dissected by scholars, clinicians, and everyday...
Introduction: Given the argument about different perspectives on the concept of trauma, the authors ...
ABSTRACT: This article describes the criminogenic process and the social implications of psychologic...
ABSTRACT Violence confronts us increasingly, everywhere: how are we to make sense of it? Its ubiquit...