This book examines violence. It looks at the nature and types of violence, the causes of violence, and the emotional wake left by violent episodes. In the twentieth century, the world experienced two world wars and countless other wars. Many millions died violent deaths from murder, death squads, purges, riots, revolutions, ethnic cleansing, rape, robbery, domestic violence, suicide, gang violence, terrorist acts, genocide, and in many other ways. As we entered the twenty-first century, we experienced 9/11, the Red Lake School deaths, suicide bombers, and more mass death brought about by the actions of governments, revolutionaries, terrorists, and still more wars. The need to better understand violence, both lethal and non-lethal, to become aware of the many forms of violence, and to learn how to survive in the aftermath of violent death are the focus of Perspectives on Violence and Violent Death.
Preface
Acknowledgments
PART I IntroductionThe Nature of Violence
Chapter 1
Good Violence/Bad Violence:Its Impact on Children and Suggested Responses Robert G. Stevenson
Chapter 2
Violence in the Family: Spirituality/Religion as Culprit and Comfort Reverend Richard B. Gilbert
Chapter 3
Conflict and Violence Within the Workplace: An Existentialist Analysis Neil Thompson
Chapter 4
Violence and the Dehumanization of Victims in Auschwitz and Beyond: Remembering Through Literature Gregory Paul Wegner
Chapter 5
Religious Violence and Weapons of Mass Destruction Timothy Kullman
PART II Encounters with Violence
Chapter 6
Resisting the Magnet: A Study of South African Children's Engagements with Neighborhood Violence Jenny Parkes
Chapter 7
Silent lCØ