This book is one of the great 20th century classics on the historical, cultural and social role of stigma in societies everywhere, but especially Western Society. Shoham, his erudition on display like no other, explores what it means to be stigmatized and how society becomes differentiated between “us” and “them.” The case study on Jean Genet, famous playwright and infamous thief, is an essay of genius, surpassing, some say, Sartre's Saint Genet. You will think about crime, criminals, the police who chase them and the judges who judge them in a very different light after you've read this book. Foreword by Marvin E. Wolfgang. Chapters include:
Foreword
Introduction
1. The Role Of Stigma In Norm-Sending And Norm-Receiving
2. Psychopathy As Social Stigma: A Myth Revisited
3. Deviant Behaviour And Value Deviation As A Predisposition To Social Stigma
4. Deviant Behaviour, Value Deviation And Social Stigma
5. The Process Of Social Stigma
6. An Empirical Referent: Social Stigma And Prostitution
7. The Formal Stigma And Its Consequences
8. The Effects Of Social Stigma
9. Social Stigma And The Criminal Group
10. Jean Genet: A Criminal Manifesto
Notes
Bibliography