Men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in South Africa

The extant South African literature base on male homicide is relatively small and reveals a paucity of qualitative studies. This study aimed to elicit discourses embedded within the narratives of men involved in homicidal encounters, and to analyse them from a social constructionist perspective....

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Main Author: Stevens, Garth Raymond
Other Authors: Seedat, Mohamed
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2014
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-20142016-04-16T04:07:53Z Men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in South Africa Stevens, Garth Raymond Seedat, Mohamed Terre Blance, M. Discourse Analysis Ideology Masculinities Power Murder Homicide Violence Social Constructionism 364.15230968| Homicide -- South Africa -- Sex differences Violence -- South Africa -- Sex differences Murderers -- South Africa Discourse analysis -- Social aspects -- South Africa The extant South African literature base on male homicide is relatively small and reveals a paucity of qualitative studies. This study aimed to elicit discourses embedded within the narratives of men involved in homicidal encounters, and to analyse them from a social constructionist perspective. Semi-structured, individual interviews were conducted with 30 male prisoners who were convicted of murder. An analysis of narrative forms, followed by a critical discourse analysis of the narrative contents, was conducted and aimed to assess the social and ideological significance, functions and effects of these discourses. Participants' talk included masculine performances that allowed for positive self-presentation and ways of constructing meaning of their actions for themselves, the interviewer and an `invisible audience'. Narrative forms of stability/continuity, decline, and transformation/growth that relied on normalising, reifying, tipping point, propitiatory and rehabilitatory lexical registers were deployed as a means to position participants as reasonable, normal, rehabilitated, and as `successful' men. Within the narrative contents, participants constructed homicide through exculpatory and justificatory discourses to rationalise and minimise their agency, and drew on essentialist, moral and deterministic notions of male violence. Discourses of spectacular and instrumental violence were also evident. References to male honour, status and power; a defence against emasculation; the assertion of control over commodified female partners; the maintenance of referent familist and ageist discourses; and the normalisation of male violence as a utilitarian tool to access resources in unequal social contexts, underpinned these discourses. The homicidal acts thus represented adapted performances of hegemonic masculinity in a noxious context where this dominant form of masculinity is often unattainable. While participants' talk reproduced hegemonic constructions of masculinity within broader social contexts, it also contested hegemonic orders of moral discourses that govern the legitimacy or illegitimacy of violence. The findings reveal how contexts of discoursal production have a contradictory response to violence - denouncing it, but also simultaneously acting as a pernicious incubatory environment for male homicide. It concludes that the prevention of male homicide must involve the de-linking of masculinities and violence at material, structural and institutional levels, but also within systems of signification, if non-violent masculinities are to gain ascendancy. Psychology D.Litt. et Phil.(Psychology) 2009-08-25T10:59:00Z 2009-08-25T10:59:00Z 2009-08-25T10:59:00Z 2008-05 2009-08 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2014 en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Discourse Analysis
Ideology
Masculinities
Power
Murder
Homicide
Violence
Social Constructionism
364.15230968|
Homicide -- South Africa -- Sex differences
Violence -- South Africa -- Sex differences
Murderers -- South Africa
Discourse analysis -- Social aspects -- South Africa
spellingShingle Discourse Analysis
Ideology
Masculinities
Power
Murder
Homicide
Violence
Social Constructionism
364.15230968|
Homicide -- South Africa -- Sex differences
Violence -- South Africa -- Sex differences
Murderers -- South Africa
Discourse analysis -- Social aspects -- South Africa
Stevens, Garth Raymond
Men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in South Africa
description The extant South African literature base on male homicide is relatively small and reveals a paucity of qualitative studies. This study aimed to elicit discourses embedded within the narratives of men involved in homicidal encounters, and to analyse them from a social constructionist perspective. Semi-structured, individual interviews were conducted with 30 male prisoners who were convicted of murder. An analysis of narrative forms, followed by a critical discourse analysis of the narrative contents, was conducted and aimed to assess the social and ideological significance, functions and effects of these discourses. Participants' talk included masculine performances that allowed for positive self-presentation and ways of constructing meaning of their actions for themselves, the interviewer and an `invisible audience'. Narrative forms of stability/continuity, decline, and transformation/growth that relied on normalising, reifying, tipping point, propitiatory and rehabilitatory lexical registers were deployed as a means to position participants as reasonable, normal, rehabilitated, and as `successful' men. Within the narrative contents, participants constructed homicide through exculpatory and justificatory discourses to rationalise and minimise their agency, and drew on essentialist, moral and deterministic notions of male violence. Discourses of spectacular and instrumental violence were also evident. References to male honour, status and power; a defence against emasculation; the assertion of control over commodified female partners; the maintenance of referent familist and ageist discourses; and the normalisation of male violence as a utilitarian tool to access resources in unequal social contexts, underpinned these discourses. The homicidal acts thus represented adapted performances of hegemonic masculinity in a noxious context where this dominant form of masculinity is often unattainable. While participants' talk reproduced hegemonic constructions of masculinity within broader social contexts, it also contested hegemonic orders of moral discourses that govern the legitimacy or illegitimacy of violence. The findings reveal how contexts of discoursal production have a contradictory response to violence - denouncing it, but also simultaneously acting as a pernicious incubatory environment for male homicide. It concludes that the prevention of male homicide must involve the de-linking of masculinities and violence at material, structural and institutional levels, but also within systems of signification, if non-violent masculinities are to gain ascendancy. === Psychology === D.Litt. et Phil.(Psychology)
author2 Seedat, Mohamed
author_facet Seedat, Mohamed
Stevens, Garth Raymond
author Stevens, Garth Raymond
author_sort Stevens, Garth Raymond
title Men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in South Africa
title_short Men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in South Africa
title_full Men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in South Africa
title_fullStr Men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in South Africa
title_sort men and meanings of murder: discourses and power in narratives of male homicide in south africa
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2014
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