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The Roots of Violent Crime in America - From the Gilded Age through the Great Depression (Hardcover)
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The Roots of Violent Crime in America - From the Gilded Age through the Great Depression (Hardcover)
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The Roots of Violent Crime in America is criminologist Barry
Latzer's comprehensive analysis of crimes of violence-including
murder, assault, and rape-in the United States from the 1880s
through the 1930s. Combining the theoretical perspectives and
methodological rigor of criminology with a synthesis of historical
scholarship as well as original research and analysis, Latzer
challenges conventional thinking about violent crime of this era.
While scholars have traditionally cast American cities in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as dreadful places, Latzer
suggests that despite overcrowding and poverty, U.S. cities enjoyed
low rates of violent crime, especially when compared to rural
areas. The rural South and the thinly populated West both suffered
much higher levels of brutal crime than the metropolises of the
East and Midwest. Latzer deemphasizes racism and bigotry as causes
of violence during this period, noting that while many social
groups confronted significant levels of discrimination and abuse,
only some engaged in high levels of violent crime. Cultural
predispositions and subcultures of violence, he posits, led some
groups to participate more frequently in violent activity than
others. He also argues that the prohibition on alcohol in the 1920s
did not drive up rates of violent crime. Though the bootlegger wars
contributed considerably to the murder rate in some of America's
largest municipalities, Prohibition also eliminated saloons, which
served as hubs of vice, corruption, and lawlessness. The Roots of
Violent Crime in America stands as a sweeping reevaluation of the
causes of crimes of violence in the United States between the
Gilded Age and World War II, compelling readers to rethink enduring
assumptions on this contentious topic.
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