Lexington Books
Pages: 214
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-1-7936-1721-7 • Hardback • July 2023 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-7936-1722-4 • eBook • July 2023 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Greg McCreery is professor at University of South Florida’s Judy Genshaft Honors College.
Chapter One: A Commonsense View of Violence
Chapter Two: When Violence is an Essentially Contested Concept
Chapter Three: Disagreement Concerning Political Violence: A Legitimacy Issue
Chapter Four: On the Violence of Nonviolence
"Greg McCreery's work carefully traces conflicting conceptualizations of violence through key theorists, powerfully demonstrating that differences in understandings of violence are not accidental, but form and are formed by the very elements which constitute political ideology. Definitions of violence are always already intimately embedded in our social, institutional, and experiential relationships, and are unavoidably intwined with our notions of the body, power, justice, and freedom. Rather than fruitlessly striving for a universal definition of violence outside the fray, McCreery invites us to understand these irreducible differences as enduring resources for political expression, and as indispensable tools for ideological diagnosis"
— Shon Meckfessel, author of Nonviolence Ain’t What It Used To Be: Unarmed Insurrection and the Rhetoric of Resistance