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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: ceremonial violence, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 8 of 8
1. Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE Looks at the Tragedy of Rampage Shootings

Yesterday's tragic news in Geneva County, Alabama raises many questions about rampage shootings, which are becoming an all too familiar news headline. Jonathan Fast, Associate Professor of Research at the Wurzwelier School of Social Work, Yeshivia University, addressed many of these complex issues in his groundbreaking study of school rampage shooting, Ceremonial Violence.

0 Comments on Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE Looks at the Tragedy of Rampage Shootings as of 3/11/2009 9:41:00 AM
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2. Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE Reviewed in The Brooklyn Rail

Jonathan Fast's Ceremonial Violence: A Psychological Examination of School Shootings, is reviewed by Nicole Robson in the November issue of The Brooklyn Rail: "Readers looking for a clean-cut, definitive answer to why school rampage shootings occur will be disappointed. Fast acknowledges a multitude of variables, from malignant narcissism to identity confusion and mental disturbances, which contribute to a child committing mass murder and, in most cases, suicide. Yet the book distinguishes itself from mainstream media coverage by delving deeper not only into the candidates’ psyches, but also the social and historical context of the communities within which these tragedies took place."

0 Comments on Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE Reviewed in The Brooklyn Rail as of 11/11/2008 12:34:00 PM
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3. Meet Jonathan Fast, author of CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE, at Barnes & Noble in NYC on October 1

Jonathan Fast, author of Ceremonial Violence: A Psychological Explanation of School Shootings, will discuss his new book at Barnes & Noble in Greenwich Village on Wednesday, October 1, at 7:30pm. Recently featured in Salon, Time, and New York Times Book Review, Fast's Ceremonial Violence examines the motives behind these shocking acts of violence.

0 Comments on Meet Jonathan Fast, author of CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE, at Barnes & Noble in NYC on October 1 as of 9/30/2008 11:50:00 AM
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4. Salon on Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE

Salon's Laura Miller takes a look at what turns an angry, alienated teen into a school shooter in her penetrating review of Jonathan Fast's new book Ceremonial Violence: "School shootings, at least those that kill only one or two people, have come to seem almost commonplace. The killing of one 15-year-old by another 15-year-old in a Knoxville, Tenn., high school cafeteria on Aug. 21 barely registered on the national radar screen. In order to make a name for himself, any malignantly narcissistic adolescent with a dream will need to aim for a body count in at least the low two-figures. Gun control opponents assure us that allowing teachers (and even students) to carry guns will help the situation by enabling potential victims to defend themselves against the likes of Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold. The Supreme Court seems inclined to oblige them, and perhaps regular shootouts will become a high school rite of passage, just like the prom and smoking behind the gym. Deeper, more systemic repairs to our culture will be harder to come by. Like the bullying prevention programs Fast describes in the final chapter of "Ceremonial Violence," such measures demand "attentiveness, self-scrutiny, consistency, detachment, and dogged attention to detail." And that sure just doesn't sound very American."

0 Comments on Salon on Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE as of 9/10/2008 2:47:00 PM
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5. Library Journal Recommends Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE

Jonathan Fast's new book Ceremonial Violence is reviewed in the current issue of Library Journal: "Fast, a novelist as well as a professor of social work (Yeshiva Univ.), explores the psychological roots of school violence through in-depth case studies of six young shooters, including Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold of Columbine High. While the author hypothesizes that all of the shooters see their acts as cleansing and elevating rituals, he shows that there is no single underlying situation—parental neglect or low IQ, for example—that invariably led these young people into difficulty. Most of these teens felt alienated from their peers, although some seem to have been goaded into action by groups of aggressive so-called friends who pushed them to commit violent acts. The case studies are compelling; fans of true crime will like the book as pure narrative, while parents and educators will appreciate the suggestions for identifying potentially violent students. This is a good companion to Katherine S. Newman and others' Rampage: The Social Roots of School Shootings, which explores the same situations from a sociological viewpoint. Recommended for all academic and most public libraries."

0 Comments on Library Journal Recommends Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE as of 8/18/2008 1:34:00 PM
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6. Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE in Vanity Fair's Hot Type

Jonathan Fast's intriguing study on school shootings, Ceremonial Violence, is noted in Elissa Schappel's monthly column in Vanity Fair on hot new book releases. The result of over five years of research, Ceremonial Violence analyzes the events leading up to and comprising some of the most chilling school rampage shootings in recent years and their aftermath. For the first time, the tragic events of Columbine, Virginia Tech, and others are examined in a way that truly illuminates the causes and effects of this disturbing phenomenon.

0 Comments on Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE in Vanity Fair's Hot Type as of 8/1/2008 9:00:00 AM
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7. Overlook Preview: Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE

Coming this September is an important new book on one of most serious issues of our times: school rampage shootings. Author Jonathan Fast, Ph.D., spent five years researching these senseless tragedies. Ceremonial Violence: A Psychological Explanation of School Shootings analyzes the Columbine high school shooting and four other cases and explains for the first time why teenagers commit school rampage shootings. With a clear grasp of the elements of abnormal psychology, developmental psychology, sociology, and neurology that contribute to the homicidal mindset, Fast offers us a means of understanding and coming to terms with these tragedies.

0 Comments on Overlook Preview: Jonathan Fast's CEREMONIAL VIOLENCE as of 5/30/2008 11:14:00 AM
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8. Where do you go after 9 days in the hospital?

Where do you go after nine days in the hospital?

If you are Paul, the 62 year old homeless guy I recently realized lives in my neighborhood, you get discharged to your car. When it is below freezing every night. With a white paper bag containing 13 prescription bottles. Each has its own dosing regimen. Many have to be taken with food. [Full disclosure: there is some kind of terrible irony here.]

Paul said he was diagnosed with some kind of blood disorder that ended in "stenosis." It had something to do with how poorly he has been eating. He gets lunch Monday through Friday at Loaves and Fishes. That's only 5 of 21 hypothetical meals one should eat every week. And he's been living in his car since Aug. 13.

In a way, it was a relief to see him again today when I went for a run. I've been wondering where he is. And he looked pretty good. He got a clean shave in the hospital and his eyes looked clear. He also had huge purple bruises on the backs of his hands from where they put the IVs in. He said he was in the ICU for three of the nine days.

He refused offers of money, food and my phone number. All he wants is a place to live. He got his kicker check from the state of Oregon and his SS Disability has finally been increased. He knows two older guys who are also looking for a place to live. Let me know if you know of any possblities in Portland.

I'm going to try to find him later with a gift card for Thriftway, since that's where he shops and frequently parks his car. He was grateful they didn't tow his car while he was in the hospital.



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