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Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory


Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory

Hardback by Garland, David (Reader in Law, Reader in Law, University of Edinburgh)

Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory

£105.00

ISBN:
9780198762393
Publication Date:
6 Sep 1990
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
320 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 16 - 21 May 2024
Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory

Description

This wide-ranging study provides the first comprehensive account of the forms, functions, and significance of punishment in modern society. Arguing that penal institutions are social and cultural artefacts as well as techniques of crime control, the book explores the ways in which penality interacts with a variety of social forces, including strategies of power, socio-economic structures, and cultural sensibilities. In constructing his multi-dimensional account, the author re-assesses the interpretations of punishment offered by the Durkheimian, Marxist, and Foucauldian traditions, and goes on to add a more explicitly cultural reading of his own, drawing upon recent work in cultural anthropology and the ideas of Weber and Elias. Throughout the study, the insights of social and historical theory are brought to bear upon the details of contemporary penal practice in a way which illustrates both the particularities of punishing and the general character of modern society. The resulting synthesis is a major achievement which will allow sociologists and historians to gain a better understanding of this complex social institution and will help policy-makers to develop more realistic and appropriate objectives in the field of penal policy.

Contents

The sociology of punishment and punishment today; Punishment and social solidarity: the work of Emile Durkheim; Punishment and the construction of authority: a reworking of Durkheimian themes; The political economy of punishment: Rusche and Kirchheimer and the Marxist tradition; Punishment as ideology and class control; variations on Marxist themes; Punishment and the technologies of power: the work of Michel Foucault; Beyond the power perspective: a critique of Foucault on punishment; The rationalization of punishment: Weberian themes and modern penality; Punishment and culture: cultural forms and penal practices; Punishment and sensibilities: a genealogy of 'civilised' sanctions; Punishment as a cultural agent: penality's role in the creation of culture; Punishment as a social institution

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