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The Politics of Interpersonal Violence in the Urban Periphery.

Authors :
Auyero, Javier
Source :
Current Anthropology; Oct2015 Supplement, Vol. 56 Issue S11, pS169-S179, 11p, 1 Black and White Photograph, 1 Illustration
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Based on 30 months of collaborative ethnographic fieldwork in a high-poverty, crime-ridden area in metropolitan Buenos Aires, this paper scrutinizes the political character of interpersonal violence. The violence described here is not the subaltern violence that, thoroughly documented by historians and social scientists, directs against the state, the powerful, or their symbols. It is a violence that is neither redemptive nor cleansing, but it is deeply political in a threefold sense: (a) it is entangled with the intermittent and contradictory form in which the police intervene in this relegated neighborhood, (b) it has the potential to give birth to collective action that targets the state while simultaneously signaling it as the main actor responsible for the skyrocketing physical aggression in the area, and (c) it provokes paradoxical forms of informal social control as residents rely on state agents who are themselves enmeshed in the production of this violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00113204
Volume :
56
Issue :
S11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Current Anthropology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
110966190
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/681435