书评:亚历克斯·辛普森,《危害生产与伦敦金融城金融的道德错位:民族志》

IF 1.7 3区 社会学 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Crime Media Culture Pub Date : 2022-11-22 DOI:10.1177/17416590221139904
Daniel Mitchell
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Despite penal reform agendas appearing in different international contexts in recent years, insights uncovered throughout the book show how these top-down policies often contradict operational practices in penal sites. By focusing on the minutiae of environments and processes within spaces of social control, and specifically the embodied experiences of punishment, we see how these spaces continue to be painful (Chapters 5 and 8). Indeed, the textured narratives in this collection allow the reader to encounter an array of carceral spaces in different geographical contexts and cultures. It was striking to see how the disregard for (some) human life was depicted in so many of the chapters, reinforcing questions concerning the purpose and practice of punishment. We are reminded that state-sanctioned violence occurs each and every day across the globe through, for instance, the continued use of incarceration (Chapters 2, 11 and 13). Albeit this violence manifests in different ways, and to varying degrees, it remains present in our contemporary ‘humane’ societies. This text moves us away from more traditional narratives about punishment and penalty that rely on the visual, and while this may cause some ‘academic discomfort’ (Herrity, Schmidt, Warr, p. xxix), I agree with the editors that this is ‘necessary’ for a new sensory epistemology to blossom. However, readers of this book will feel some discomfort as it will prompt them to think about their own positionality and practice; from their epistemological stance to their previous and/or forthcoming methodological choices, analytical processes and reflexive practices. Even if readers come to the decision that this is ‘touchy feely’ or otherwise an unscientific way of conducting criminological research, it will have encouraged a form of self-interrogation – and this, so rarely a part of our criminological training, is one of the achievements of this edited collection. As such, it is without doubt that the editors’ aim to ‘invigorate a conversation about the role of sensory experience in the production of knowledge’ (p. xxi), has been met. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

这本书真正实现了对犯罪学注意力和思维的(重新)聚焦。这有好处,因为页面上提供的描述更为明显,因此有助于将读者带入被检查的环境。例如,这本书包含了各种形式的创造性写作,如小插曲、短篇小说和歌词,这些都是交流各自刑罚景观的极其有效的媒介。讨论了其他重大的方法学挑战,包括诚信和问责问题——研究人员如何进行人种学研究,这需要与伦理和政治立场相冲突和/或沉默的空间的感官体现(第6章和第9章)。尽管近年来刑事改革议程出现在不同的国际背景下,但整本书所揭示的见解表明,这些自上而下的政策往往与刑事场所的运作实践相矛盾。通过关注社会控制空间内环境和过程的细节,特别是惩罚的具体体验,我们看到了这些空间是如何持续痛苦的(第5章和第8章)。事实上,这本书中的纹理叙事让读者能够在不同的地理背景和文化中遇到一系列的尸体空间。令人震惊的是,在如此多的章节中,对(某些)人类生命的漠视被描述出来,强化了有关惩罚目的和实践的问题。我们被提醒,国家批准的暴力行为每天都在全球范围内发生,例如,通过持续使用监禁(第2、11和13章)。尽管这种暴力以不同的方式和不同的程度表现出来,但它仍然存在于我们当代的“人道”社会中。这篇文章让我们远离了依赖视觉的关于惩罚和刑罚的更传统的叙事,虽然这可能会引起一些“学术上的不适”(Herrity,Schmidt,Warr,p.xxix),但我同意编辑们的观点,即这是一种新的感官认识论开花的“必要”。然而,这本书的读者会感到一些不适,因为它会促使他们思考自己的立场和实践;从他们的认识论立场到他们之前和/或即将到来的方法选择、分析过程和反射实践。即使读者认为这是一种“感性的”或其他不科学的犯罪学研究方式,它也会鼓励一种形式的自我审问——而这很少成为我们犯罪学培训的一部分,是这本编辑集的成就之一。因此,毫无疑问,编辑们的目标是“激发关于感官体验在知识生产中的作用的对话”(第xxi页)。如果像我一样,读者发现自己同意编辑的观点,并能够理解“惩罚是如何具有内在的感官成分的”(Herrity,Schmidt和Warr,第xxiii页),那么他们会更欣赏这本书——这是一种开创性的方法论和智力贡献。
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Book review: Alex Simpson, Harm Production and the Moral Dislocation of Finance in the City of London: An Ethnography
that occur beyond the visual – that the book really achieves a (re)focusing of criminological attention and thinking. This has benefits as the descriptions provided on the page are much more palpable and therefore help transport the reader into the environment under examination. For instance, the book hosts various forms of creative writing, such as vignettes, short stories and music lyrics, which are extremely effective mediums with which to communicate the respective penal landscapes. Other significant methodological challenges are discussed, including issues of integrity and accountability – how researchers navigate ethnographic research which necessities a sensorial embodiment of spaces which conflict with and/or mute ethical and political positionalities (Chapters 6 and 9). Despite penal reform agendas appearing in different international contexts in recent years, insights uncovered throughout the book show how these top-down policies often contradict operational practices in penal sites. By focusing on the minutiae of environments and processes within spaces of social control, and specifically the embodied experiences of punishment, we see how these spaces continue to be painful (Chapters 5 and 8). Indeed, the textured narratives in this collection allow the reader to encounter an array of carceral spaces in different geographical contexts and cultures. It was striking to see how the disregard for (some) human life was depicted in so many of the chapters, reinforcing questions concerning the purpose and practice of punishment. We are reminded that state-sanctioned violence occurs each and every day across the globe through, for instance, the continued use of incarceration (Chapters 2, 11 and 13). Albeit this violence manifests in different ways, and to varying degrees, it remains present in our contemporary ‘humane’ societies. This text moves us away from more traditional narratives about punishment and penalty that rely on the visual, and while this may cause some ‘academic discomfort’ (Herrity, Schmidt, Warr, p. xxix), I agree with the editors that this is ‘necessary’ for a new sensory epistemology to blossom. However, readers of this book will feel some discomfort as it will prompt them to think about their own positionality and practice; from their epistemological stance to their previous and/or forthcoming methodological choices, analytical processes and reflexive practices. Even if readers come to the decision that this is ‘touchy feely’ or otherwise an unscientific way of conducting criminological research, it will have encouraged a form of self-interrogation – and this, so rarely a part of our criminological training, is one of the achievements of this edited collection. As such, it is without doubt that the editors’ aim to ‘invigorate a conversation about the role of sensory experience in the production of knowledge’ (p. xxi), has been met. If, like me, readers find themselves agreeing with the editors and can appreciate how ‘penality has an inherent sensory component’ (Herrity, Schmidt and Warr, p. xxiii), then they will appreciate this book as more than this – as a seminal methodological and intellectual contribution.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
11.10%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Crime, Media, Culture is a fully peer reviewed, international journal providing the primary vehicle for exchange between scholars who are working at the intersections of criminological and cultural inquiry. It promotes a broad cross-disciplinary understanding of the relationship between crime, criminal justice, media and culture. The journal invites papers in three broad substantive areas: * The relationship between crime, criminal justice and media forms * The relationship between criminal justice and cultural dynamics * The intersections of crime, criminal justice, media forms and cultural dynamics
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