Competitive Violence and the Micro-Politics of the Fight Label

Author:

Jackson-Jacobs Curtis

Abstract

Although physical fighting is a common theme in research on youth, crime, and schools, social scientists have only rarely confronted a basic question: What makes a fight a ‘fight’? The label and its application are highly consequential for violent actors and social control agencies. Based on several years of longitudinal ethnographic fieldwork with several dozen American youth involved in violence (including a qualitative dataset of 189 violent encounters), the analysis documents the meaning of physical fights as a distinctive form of violent interaction. First, a definition of a ‘fight’ from the sample members' perspective is presented: a stretch of serious, competitive, hand-to-hand violence. Next, the article turns to the ‘micro-politics’ of labelling violence by institutions of discipline and control. By treating violence as a mutual fight, social control agents implicitly deny the roles of ‘victim’ and ‘perpetrator’. Police and school officials may creatively invoke the fight label either to avoid taking action or to punish all parties involved in violence on the street, in the home or at school. Finally, the discussion concludes by addressing variations in how violence is labelled across social ecologies and socioeconomic contexts, and the interrelated nature of the ‘fight’, ‘violence’ and ‘victim’ labels.

Funder

Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Cited by 6 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Communicating consent in sport: A typological model of athletes’ consent practices within combat sports;International Review for the Sociology of Sport;2021-10-06

2. The Rules of Violence: Young People’s Moral Work around Violence and Fighting;Young People and Learning Processes in School and Everyday Life;2019

3. ‘Cowards’ and ‘Scumbags’: Tough Talk and Men’s Violence;International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy;2018-12-01

4. A Thematic Analysis of Spectator Violence at Sporting Events in North America;Deviant Behavior;2017-12-08

5. Breaking the First Two Rules of Fight Club;Antisocial Media;2017-11-29

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