Abstracts
Introduction
By Stephen Andrew Sherblom, Jane Davagian Tchaicha, and Paula M. Szulc
Sexual Harassment in School
:
The Public Performance of Gendered Violence
By Nan Stein
Reconstructing Masculinity in the Locker Room
:
The Mentors in Violence Prevention Project
By Jackson Katz
Cultivating a Morality of Care in African American Adolescents
:
A Culture-Based Model of Violence Prevention
By Janie V. Ward
Preventing and Producing Violence
:
A Critical Analysis of Responses to School Violence
By Pedro A. Noguera
Life after Death
:
Critical Pedagogy in an Urban Classroom
By J. Alleyne Johnson
Violence, Nonviolence, and the Lessons of History
:
Project HIP-HOP Journeys South
By Nancy Uhlar Murray and Marco Garrido
Book Notes
Raising a Thinking Child
By Myrna B. Shure, with Theresa Foy Digeronimo
Ending the Cycle of Violence
Edited by Einat Peled, Peter G. Jaffe, and Jeffrey L. Edleson
Gangs
Edited by Scott Cummings and Daniel Monti
Culture and Imperialism
By Edward Said
Old Nazis, the New Right, and the Republican Party
By Russ Bellant
Teaching Young Children in Violent Times
By Diane Levin
Testimony
By Shoshana Feldman and Dori Laub.
Dating Violence
Edited by Barrie Levy
Vulnerable Children, Vulnerable Families
By Susan Janko.
The Merry-Go-Round of Sexual Abuse
By William E. Prendergast.
Juvenile Delinquency
Edited by Paul M. Sharp and Barry W. Hancock.
Anger Management for Youth
By Leona L. Eggert.
Assessing Dangerousness
Edited by Jacquelyn C. Campbell.
Changing Childhood Prejudice
By Florence H. Davidson and Miriam M. Davidson
Practicing Virtues
By Kim Hays
Wannabe
By Daniel J. Monti.
The Violence of Literacy
By J. Elspeth Stuckey.
A Dialogue with Noam Chomsky
The dialogue begins by confronting the dominant ideologies that drive our history of systemic inequalities, oppression, and sanctioned violence that have resulted in this country's current culture of violence. Moving from a discussion of how the poor and middle-class in the United States subsidize the rich, to how the media and public institutions such as schools function to manufacture public consent for, and complicity with, such unequal distribution of power and wealth, Chomsky concludes with a discussion of the possibilities for progressive social change. Throughout, the dialogue vividly illustrates how we as a society often work against the values that we publicly profess, such as the growth and health of children, the social and economic well-being of all people, and the basic tenets of democracy.
As participants in this dialogue, Editors Sherblom and Leistyna acknowledge their understanding of violence as endemic to unequal and exclusionary economic and social structures. This understanding and their commitment to social transformation shaped both the flavor of the questions and the evolution of the discussion, and may not reflect the opinion of the full Board of the Harvard Educational Review.
The Board sincerely hopes that the following will contribute significantly to meaningful public dialogue, support the development and implementation of social policy that will reduce violence in the lives of youth, and work toward realizing a vision of a society without violence.
(pp.127-144)