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Crimes of Punishment: America's Culture of Violence
 
 
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Crimes of Punishment: America's Culture of Violence [Perfect Paperback]

Theodore L. Dorpat (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1, 2007
This groundbreaking book by an award-winning psychoanalyst and forensic psychiatrist presents a comprehensive exploration of a timely but often taboo topic: the failure of punishment to deter crime and violence, an issue that affects us both individually and as a culture.

Written at the culmination of the author s fifty-year career as a psychoanalyst, forensic psychologist and scholar, this wide-ranging work identifies the origins of violence and investigates the surprising consequences of punishment from a multitude of perspectives. In his treatment of the topic, Dr. Dorpat utilizes scientific research; ethical reasoning, and his vast clinical experience and insight. He also suggests the benefits of new and emerging humane alternatives to the revenge/punishment model currently entrenched in our society, such as restorative justice. In contrast to most contemporary measures, these new approaches while still imprisoning dangerous individuals effectively stress reparation and forms of sanctioning other than incarceration. When restitution replaces revenge, everyone benefits.

Crimes of Punishment examines four key, interrelated social methods of punishment. These are (1) the corporal punishment of children, (2) the incarceration of adults in prisons, (3) capital punishment the death penalty, and (4) emotional (verbal) abuse. As he elucidates and analyzes each of these forms of punishment, Dr. Dorpat clearly and logically makes the case that punishment is not only ineffectual but that it also engenders more of what it ostensibly aims to stop: violence and misbehavior. Both children and adults who are subjected to punishment tend to become more violent individuals.

In covering the full scope of our contemporary justice system Dr. Dorpat brings to the forefront those who are often overlooked or dismissed: the victims of crime. His concluding chapters present and clarify the psychological wounds and needs of these individuals, and demonstrate how restorative justice is effective in attending to victims in an ethical and healing manner. In a humane and ethically evolved society restitution replaces punishment.

Market Comparison-- Crimes of Punishment is unique in that it covers not just one but four different types of punishment (the corporal punishment of children, the incarceration of adults, the death penalty, and verbal [emotional] abuse). Two earlier books written by psychiatrists expose the terrible conditions in America s prisons. They are The Crime of Punishment (New York: Viking, 1968) by Karl Menninger, and Prison Madness by Terry Kupers (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1999). This book differs in two important ways from the books written by Menninger and Kupers. First, The Crimes of Punishment covers other kinds of punishment, while those authors deal only with the punishment of incarceration. Secondly, the reforms they recommend are merely piecemeal modifications of the present criminal justice systems, whereas Dr. Dorpat argues for a radical change that includes the abolition of today s punitive prison (Retributive Justice) system and the establishment of a new and different system, namely Restorative Justice, a system that has been developed over the past decade in Australia and New Zealand. The Crimes of Punishment differs from Menninger s book in covering the many changes that have occurred in prisons since 1968. In several short chapters on restorative justice, the book also explores this exciting new approach and serves as an informed introduction to a new, important, and effective moral approach to the treatment of criminals.

Editorial Reviews

Review

Psychiatrist Dorpat takes a stand against punishment on both moral and scientific grounds. Looking at the corporal punishment of children, prison incarceration of adults, capital punishment, and emotional (verbal) abuse, he argues that the psychiatric literature demonstrates that punishment is itself a form of violence that does harm to offenders and neglects the basic emotional, psychological, and spiritual needs of victims. He recommends replacing America's punitive approach to justice with the restorative justice approach being used increasingly in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and elsewhere. --(Annotation ©2007 Book News Inc. Portland, OR)

About the Author

Dr. Theo. L. Dorpat is the author of four books and over 364 scientific publications. Over the course of his fifty-plus years as a psychoanalyst and forensic psychiatrist he received numerous awards, including the Margaret H. O Donnell Prize in Psychiatry, in 1952; he also won the Edward O. Hoedemaker M.D. Memorial Prize twice for the best clinical case studies. In 2003 the American Psychiatric Association appointed him as a Distinguished Life Fellow. Dr. Dorpat is listed in forty-six directories and Who s Who lists.
Dr. Dorpat was in the practice of psychiatry, forensic psychiatry, and psychoanalysis in Seattle, Washington. He continued to see clients up to a week before his death in October 2006, shortly after he completed work on this book. In his youth, during World War II, he served over three years in the U.S. Navy. On his return he graduated with honors from the University of Washington School of Medicine. He was a valued elder in the Pacific Northwest therapeutic community as well as an inspiring mentor, scholar, and gifted clinician.
Offering insights gained from his many decades of work as a psychoanalyst and forensic psychologist, the he presents a compelling picture of the detrimental effects of punishment, as well as a look at the new possibilities for restorative justice now being explored in Britain and Australia. Informed by scholarship, compassion, and a desire to confront injustice, this important work opens new ground for reconsidering our contemporary justice system.
-- By the Same Author: (2002). Wounded Monster Hitler s Path from Trauma to Malevolence. Lanham MD: University Press of America. (1992, with Miller, M. L.) Clinical Interaction and the Analysis of Meaning: A New Psychoanalytic Theory. Hillsdale NJ: Analytic Press. (1991). Gaslighting, the Double Whammy, Interrogation, and Other Methods of Covert Control in Psychotherapy and Analysis. Northvale NJ: Jason Aronson. (1985). Denial and Defense in the Therapeutic Situation. New York: Jason Aronson.

Product Details

  • Perfect Paperback: 306 pages
  • Publisher: Algora Publishing (June 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0875865631
  • ISBN-13: 978-0875865638
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,430,943 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Social revolutionary hero, November 13, 2010
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This review is from: Crimes of Punishment: America's Culture of Violence (Perfect Paperback)
I regret Dr. Dorpat's passing as I never had a chance to thank him for his work. I'm a recovering mental health compromised patient. Viewed nearly universally as being benign and frivolent in degree of psychological damage effects I was and am still living with a psychosexual damage, sexually expressed as a spanking fetish, which is something the mental health professional community recently has changed regarding their standard psychological diagnostic manual as no longer being considered a mental health illness. For most of my adult sexual life such odd masochistic fetish desires strictly regressive in desire to be spanked as a little boy by a strict authoritarian mother figure, the result from being truamatized by the widely accepted cultural and religiously promoted practice of child corporal punishment by parents and other child caregivers. Ten years ago I returned to my original family of origin to find one of my brothers systematically abusing all remaining siblings and my father after my mothers passing. All were lead to accept and ingnore the abuse. I rallied an intervention that eventually led to my brother's discharge from the family business and his self imposed exile of family activities since. Dr. Dorpats insight in his book as it relates to my abusive brother as explained by the uncanny resemblence to the psychologically disturbed infamous child Hitler psychologically explained and described by Dorpat was profound and acurate. Little did I know then, I would later set out to search my own psychologically wounded self, first in internet social net work to find similarly psychosexually wounded masochistic and sadistic fetish co-enablers, then truth in psychotherapy, with it's psychologically painful unveiling of sexual fetishism addiction masking denied dissociation from the trauma of formally ritualized corporal punishment by my mother including authoritarian ordered punishment sentencing, physical postioning for the pain infliction with deliberate humiliation in forced semi nudity and genital exposure with subsequent sexual arousal unidentified at that young age. His message is timeless yet ignored, shame, especially of ones sense of sexual self is as destructive as that of the polar opposite in Hitler's ego exaggerations of self. For those who believe and live in denial that shame and humiliation of punishment is effective without mental health costs to the recipient I recommend this book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Perhaps the most important work in human history, February 11, 2009
This review is from: Crimes of Punishment: America's Culture of Violence (Perfect Paperback)
The subject of my review says it all. The culture of violence in this country is unreal. If we don't do something to change that, history will repeat itself. With this terrible economic downturn, we will have something on our hands hear in America much worse than the Holocaust.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
nonviolent communication, invisible punishment, prison economy, relational perspective, nasty people, chronic posttraumatic stress disorder, feminist praxis, supermaximum units, covert emotional abuse, negative group identity, incarcerate women, general deterrence theory, moral education theory, more corporal punishment, sanctioning agent, restorative justice approach, redemptive violence, restorative justice programs, other painful emotions, collective denial, mass incarceration, compassionate communication
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Crimes of Punishment, New York, Beating the Devil Out of Them, United States, Prison Madness, South Africa, Changing Lenses, Romantic Outlaws, New Jack, The Corporation, Van Fleet, False Idea, Spare the Child, Psychoanalytic Perspective, Walter Wink, Adolf Hitler, James Gilligan, Resist Not Evil, The Crime of Imprisonment, Clarence Darrow, Governor Ryan, The Encyclopedia of American Prisons, Sing Sing, The Crime of Punishment, Ted Conover
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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