The authors investigate the underlying cultural, psychological, and social forces that have helped to form the concept of retributive justice as it exists today in both the public mind, social media and the legal system. Drawing upon such diverse representations of vengeance as Greek mythology, the plays of Shakespeare, Dante’s Inferno, the folklore of the Wild West, the Mafia, and contemporary films, the authors examine the historic and cultural manifestations of the need to inflict punishment on one’s enemies. They contend that all acts of vengeance arise from an elemental sense of injustice—conditioned by a desire for equality, justice, and reciprocity. The new introduction extends and highlights the universality of vengeance, its enhancement by modern technologies and builds an even stronger case for it deep biological and animistic roots.
İçerik tablosu
Introduction to the Second Edition. Foreword by Ernest van den Haag. Introduction. 1 The Elementary Sense of Injustice. 2 Vengeance as Anger. 3 From Vengeance to Justice. 4 Vengeance and the Sacred: Dante’s Inferno . 5 Vengeance and Responsibility: Hamlet’s Procrastination. 6 Cultures of Vengeance. 7 The Political Economy of Vengeance. 8 Vengeance as Protest: Jesse James and the Bandit Legend. 9 Brokers of Vengeance: The Mafia. 10 The Lone Avengers: An Impossible Mission. Conclusion
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Graeme Newman is distinguished professor emeritus, School of Criminal Justice, University at Albany, .