Literature DB >> 24532976

[The Habit of Rage in a United States Ghetto.]

Philippe Bourgois1, Fernando Montero Castrillo2, Laurie Hart3, George Karandinos4.   

Abstract

For five years, the open air drug sales block where the authors resided and conducted participant-observation fieldwork in the Puerto Rican corner of inner-city Philadelphia was subject to a routinized whirlwind of shootings, stabbings and assaults. The narcotics industry filled the void left by deindustrialization, turning the city's former factory district into an open-air narcotics supermarket staffed at the entry level by young Puerto Ricans serving primarily poor white injectors. A capacity to mobilize rage ensures success in the drug economy, protection in prison, and minimal income for the no-longer-worthy poor who are diagnosed as cognitively disabled. Many residents seek alliances in social networks that oblige them to participate in solidary exchanges of assistive violence. A dynamic of embodied, primitive accumulation kills, maims, disables or incarcerates most of this industry's entry-level employees and customers. Artificially high profit margins depend on violence and coercion. A rage-filled habitus propels street-level sellers into violently defending the micro-monopoly power of their bosses in the underground economy as if it were fun. They rush to enforce commercial transactions in the absence of protective legal sanctions in an environment of scarcity that is flooded by streams of cash, addictive drugs and automatic weapons. With the end of welfare entitlements, the left hand of the state, in the form of social services, attempts to continue subsidies for vulnerable individuals by diagnosing scarred bodies and brains as proof of permanent cognitive disability in need of heavy pharmaceutical medication. Periodic outbursts of interpersonal or of self-inflicted rage-filled violence emerge as the best way to ensure the continuity of that fragile public subsidy. Simultaneously, within the bowels of the right hand of the state, in overcrowded, hostilely-supervised violent prisons, rage becomes a valuable physical self-protection strategy for inmates. In short, expressive violence becomes a practical basis for economic sustenance and masculine and feminine self respect.

Entities:  

Year:  2013        PMID: 24532976      PMCID: PMC3924749     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Espac Abierto        ISSN: 1315-0006


  3 in total

1.  The Moral Economy of Violence in the US Inner City.

Authors:  George Karandinos; Laurie Kain Hart; Fernando Montero Castrillo; Philippe Bourgois
Journal:  Curr Anthropol       Date:  2014-02

2.  Pathologizing poverty: new forms of diagnosis, disability, and structural stigma under welfare reform.

Authors:  Helena Hansen; Philippe Bourgois; Ernest Drucker
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 4.634

3.  Urban segregation and the US heroin market: a quantitative model of anthropological hypotheses from an inner-city drug market.

Authors:  Daniel Rosenblum; Fernando Montero Castrillo; Philippe Bourgois; Sarah Mars; George Karandinos; George Jay Unick; Daniel Ciccarone
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2013-12-18
  3 in total

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