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Impact Factor:1.028 | Ranking:Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary 26 out of 93 | Political Science 53 out of 157
Source:2013 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2014)

Listening to What the Streets Say

Vengeance as Ideology?

  1. Ralph Cintron
    1. Department of Rhetoric at the University of Iowa

Abstract

Based on 10 years of ethnographic fieldwork in Latino/a communities in northern Illinois, this article discusses violence and vengeance among mostly youths and gang members. Four points are made. First, violence and vengeance are attempts to establish order over escalating disorder. Vengeance often relies on a conviction regarding some higher moral order. Second, vengeance can operate as a kind of counter ideology when the values and beliefs of a legally based society seem hypocritical or unreliable. Third, when we consider vengeance as a kind of ideology, we acknowledge the power of language to create a sense of what is real. Moreover, we acknowledge that ideological language always hides something from view. In short, vengeance hides pain, fear, and other vulnerabilities that lie at the root of violence. Fourth, in acknowledging these roots, the possibility of another ideology begins to take shape, that is, trust.

| Table of Contents

This Article

  1. doi: 10.1177/000271620056700104 The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science vol. 567 no. 1 42-53
  1. References

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