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HEALING FROM HATE

Michael Kimmel

How Young Men Get Into – And Out of – Violent Extremism

What draws young men into violent extremist groups? What are the ideologies that inspire them to join? And what are the emotional bonds forged that make it difficult to leave, even when they want to?
Having conducted in-depth interviews with exwhite nationalists and neo-Nazis in the United States, as well as ex-skinheads and ex-neo-Nazis in Germany and Sweden, renowned sociologist Michael Kimmel demonstrates the pernicious effects that constructions of masculinity have on these young recruits. Kimmel reveals how white extremist groups wield masculinity to recruit and retain membersand to prevent them from exiting the movement. Young men in these groups often feel a sense of righteous indignation, seeing themselves as victims, their birthright upended in a world dominated by political correctness. Offering the promise of being able to "take back their manhood," these groups leverage stereotypes of masculinity to manipulate despair into white supremacist and neo-Nazi hatred. Kimmel combines individual stories with a multiangled analysis of the structural, political, and economic forces that marginalize these men to shed light on their feelings yet make no excuses for their actions. HEALING FROM HATE reminds us of some men's efforts to exit the movements and reintegrate themselves back into society and is a call to action to those who make it out to help those who are still trapped. Michael Kimmel is one of the world's leading experts on men and masculinities. He is the SUNY Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Gender Studies at Stony Brook University and the author of Manhood in America, Angry White Men, The Politics of Manhood, The Gendered Society, and Guyland. With funding from the MacArthur Foundation, he founded the Center for the Study of Men and Masculinities at Stony Brook in 2013.
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Published 2018-03-01 by University of California Press

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Kimmel] believes that gender, specifically masculinity, is both 'the psychological inspiration' that sends young men into these groups "and the social glue that keeps them involved.' If true and Kimmel makes a compelling case that it is that could be good news for rehabilitation, because it is much easier to challenge violent extremism by engaging these young men as men, instead of trying to convince them that an ideology they may have embraced is flawed. Read more...

Important and moving . . . . an illuminating book building on over twenty years of thinking and research, Michael Kimmel shows that the boy crisis provides fertile ground for recruiters from white supremacist, neo-Nazi, and other extremist groups.

In Kimmel's astute and, yes, empathetic analysis, he argues that the young men in this book are enticed not by ideology, but by the powerful draw of camaraderie, belonging, and a moral code, not to mention access to women and sex (even if, in the case of jihadis, it's in the afterlife). Read more...