Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Violence, Spatiality and Other Rurals

  • Russell G Hogg
  • , K Carrington

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Occidentalism, which treats the other as the same, can be detected in both the criminological and rural sociological treatment of violence in the sociospatial sites of rural countrysides. Criminology tends to mistakenly assume that violence in the modern world is primarily an urban phenomenon (Baldwin & Bottoms, 1976, p. 1; Braithwaite, 1989, p. 47). If violence in rural settings is encountered it tends to be treated as a smaller scale version of the urban problem, or the importation of an otherwise urban problem - as the corrupting influence of the gesellschaft within the gemeinschaft. Within much rural sociology violence is rendered invisible by the assumption that rural communities conform to the idealised conception of the typical gemeinschaft society, small-scale traditional societies based on strong cohesiveness, intimacy and organic forms of solidarity. What these bonds conceal, rather than reveal - violence within the family - remains invisible to the public gaze. The visibility of violence within Aboriginal families and communities presents a major exception to the spatially ordered social relations which render so much white family violence hidden. The need to take into account the complexity and diversity of these sociospatial relations is concretely highlighted in our research which has taken us out of the urban context and confronted us not only with the phenomenon of the violence of other rurals1, but also with fundamentally competing claims on, and conceptions of, space and place in the context of a racially divided Australian interior. This article represents the second installment of conceptual reflections on this research, with the first having been published in this journal in 1998.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)293-319
    JournalAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology
    Volume36
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2003

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Violence, Spatiality and Other Rurals'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this