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Ending The Silence
Ron Thorne-Finch

Ending The Silence

the origins and treatment of male violence against women

University of Toronto Press (1992)
9780802069238
| Book - Paperback
394 pages
LC Classification HV6626.2 .T46 1992
LC Control No. 92194413

Genre

  • Abuse of Women and Children

Subject

  • Research and Advocacy (AWC-AR)

Plot

Product Description Police statistics, government studies, and media reports all indicate that male violence against women is escalating. But very little has been done to understand the deep roots of the phenomenon. Until that happens, no means to eradicate male violence will be effective.To this end Ron Thorne-Finch offers an incisive analysis of the causes of male violence against women, and places the issue in a political context. He argues that men's emotional, physical, and sexual violence are all inextricably linked: to end the violence we must address the effects of academia, the family, the media, the military, the peer group, pornography, and sport in creating violent men.The women's movement has played a pivotal role in breaking the silence about male violence and providing the political pressure to compel state funding for victim and offender programs. But Thorne-Finch argues that changes in the current state response are unlikely to occur unless more men take individual and collective reponsibility for male violence. He provides a detailed examination of the responses among North American men in encouraging and resisting male violence against women.Male violence must not remain 'just' a women's issue. Thorne-Finch calls upon men to become more active in the struggle to end it. In a skilful balance between clinical intervention, social analysis, and political action he offers both the professional and the layperson a way to proceed in the struggle to end violence against women. From the Inside Flap 'Not just another book about men who batter, this work fulfills its promise with a solid and critical overview of psychological, physiological, and social theories of abuse. ... This book is well worth reading for intervenors, students of family violence and men in general.'