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Deviant Deception: A dying study
National Review Online ^ | August 11, 2003 | Katrhyn Jean Lopez

Posted on 08/11/2003 1:19:33 PM PDT by nickcarraway

The Politics of Deviance by Anne B. Hendershott
(Encounter Books, 2002), 194 pages

Most sociologists today deem the study of deviance an academic irrelevancy. In The Politics of Deviance, Anne B. Hendershott, a professor of sociology at the University of San Diego, seeks to put it back in the curriculum.

"[F]or the majority of sociologists today," Hendershott writes, "the only reason to study deviance is to dissect a long-dead discipline in order to understand why so many sociologists once deemed it important."

"Most of the sociology textbooks today," the author continues, "are critical of the notion of defining deviance and even more critical of any sociologist who might suggest that the concept was ever useful in helping us understand social order."

The reason for the silence — and the premature reports of the passing of a discipline — is that, as Hendershott writes, "For today's postmodern sociologists, conceptions of deviance cannot exist in a society that has been so dramatically changed by shifts in values, politics and social relations. The commitment to egalitarianism, along with a growing reluctance to judge the behavior of others, has made discussions of deviance obsolete."

Wishful thinking on their part. For, unfortunately, deviance is very much alive, and likely to be so for as long as man is — even if it is politically incorrect to say so.

As Hendershott shows, to claim that deviance is dead is to avoid a whole panoply of issues most fair-minded academics don't want to touch — and certainly do not want to pass judgment on: homosexuality, promiscuity, adultery. The list goes on.

"In the aftermath of the radical egalitarianism of the 1960s," Hendershott writes, "merely to label a behavior as deviant came to be viewed as rejecting the equality — perhaps the very humanity — of those engaging in it."

As Hendershott sees it, the erasure of deviance has blunted society's ability to condemn certain choices. In fact, they are not even choices anymore.

Take drug abuse as an example. In a damning chapter, Hendershott explains how the problem has become largely medicalized, to the extent that former baseball star Darryl Strawberry's drug addiction is presented as akin to his cancer. When actor Robert Downey Jr. was arrested on drug charges (again) weeks after receiving an Emmy award, the media scrambled to blame his genes, his upbringing, his environment — anyone and everyone but him.

Hendershott writes: "Instead of holding the actor responsible for his latest lapse into substance abuse and addiction, the media offered to transfer any blame for Downey's problem to Hollywood itself … One Boston Globe critic claimed that most people believe that Hollywood should have given him space after his release from prison and that producer David E. Kelley did him no favors by featuring him on the television series 'Ally McBeal.'"

What happens when there is no recognition of the existence of behavioral norms within a society? It becomes difficult to condemn even the most despicable acts or to hold perpetrators responsible for their actions.

This is not just a what-if scenario, by the way. Look at the crime of pedophilia, for example. It's already being referred to by the intelligentsia under the euphemism "intergenerational intimacy." In other words, sure, it's wrong when it is forced, but who's to say that it is objectively wrong?

Destigmatization efforts make pedophilia, according to Hendershott, "a behavior whose status now appears to be in transition."

Hendershott's prescription for waking up from this sort of societal delusion? We must regroup and "draw from nature, reason and common sense to define what is deviant and reaffirm the moral ties that bind us together." That's a tall order, but there's still time to fill it.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: adultery; culture; deviance; deviancy; homosexuality; moralrelativism; pedophilia; promiscuity; society; sociology

1 posted on 08/11/2003 1:19:33 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: Canticle_of_Deborah; Desdemona; NYer; Salvation; american colleen; sandyeggo; JMJ333; ...
ping
2 posted on 08/11/2003 1:20:54 PM PDT by nickcarraway (a a)
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To: nickcarraway
PJ O'Rourke stated it more succinctly in Republican Party Reptile. "There is no such thing as shame in contemporary Hollywood. What used to be shame is now just publicity."
3 posted on 08/11/2003 1:25:19 PM PDT by .cnI redruM ("If you think no one cares about you, try skipping next month's car payment" - Daily Zen)
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To: nickcarraway
From his grave, Antonio Gramsci is deeply saddened...
4 posted on 08/11/2003 1:27:05 PM PDT by rdb3 (I'm not a complete idiot. Several parts are missing.)
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To: rdb3
...Sadened that he wasn't recognized as the most prescient and influential of the 20th century.
5 posted on 08/11/2003 1:28:58 PM PDT by nickcarraway (a a)
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To: nickcarraway
Look at the crime of pedophilia, for example. It's already being referred to by the intelligentsia under the euphemism "intergenerational intimacy."

I wondered what homoerotic feel good name they would give to pedophilia.

If we do not stop the gay agenda pedophilia will be legal in our lifetime!

6 posted on 08/11/2003 1:41:38 PM PDT by Between the Lines ("What Goes Into the Mind Comes Out in a Life")
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To: nickcarraway
Philosophical point: all revolutionaries are by definition deviant (dictionary.com definition: differing from a norm or from the accepted standards of a society). So "deviance" is not in itself necessarily a perjorative. This isn't relativism: deviance that advances the cause of good is good, and that which advances evil is evil. /ramble
7 posted on 08/11/2003 2:20:43 PM PDT by ellery
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To: nickcarraway
The commitment to egalitarianism, along with a growing reluctance to judge the behavior of others, has made discussions of deviance obsolete."

Anyone who can write such a sentence, has discredited themselves from the society of rational men and women. It clearly puts dogma ahead of reality, and suggests that dogma controls all relevancy.

The reality is that no two of us are truly equal; indeed, no two apples on the same tree are truly equal. Whatever the emotional appeal of equality to the dogmatists of the Left, rational discussions of the human condition, of the paths of human society, of the past and future, cannot be limited by such dogmatic denial. It is as though these dogmatists have founded a new religion, one based upon adulation for the mythical ostrich, his head buried in the sands of self-inflicted ignorance.

America needs an army of small boys, whose parents or grandparents have told them the sacredness of truth--boys willing to say, when the morons in American Academia are parading about in their "post-modern" clothes, that they are intellectually stark, raving, naked.

William Flax Return Of The Gods Web Site

8 posted on 08/11/2003 3:19:14 PM PDT by Ohioan
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To: nickcarraway; ahadams2; drstevej; american colleen; sinkspur; Lady In Blue; Salvation; Polycarp; ...
We must regroup and "draw from nature, reason and common sense to define what is deviant and reaffirm the moral ties that bind us together."

Reason?

Richard Hooker, one of the most brilliant theologians of the time came up with a description for Anglicanism which is still true and is still in use today. He called Anglicanism the Via Media, the middle way between Presbyterianism/Puritanism on the one hand and Roman Catholicism on the other. Hooker also gave us the famous three legged stool for the foundation of authority in the church Scripture/Tradition/Reason. Scripture which Protestant believers emphasized. Tradition which was most important for Roman Catholics. And Reason, which Anglicans believed God had gifted human beings with, so as to come to some agreement between Scripture and Tradition.

It is "Reason" that has enabled the Episcopal Church to elect a reprobate to the position of bishop. Hendershott needs to return to the books to look for a better solution. Suggestion, begin and end with the Bible.

9 posted on 08/11/2003 3:55:21 PM PDT by NYer (Laudate Dominum)
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To: NYer
okay I'm sorry but Hooker would *never* have allowed reason to override both Scripture and Tradition. Indeed the accusation that the homosexual nonsense was the result of some misapplication of 'reason' is itself unreasonable, when one considers that what actually led to the current state of affairs was the conservatives refusing to confront heretical liberals as they slowly, but certainly subverted the heiarchy of most of the Episcopal Church. Indeed 'reason' was no more the motive, nor cause of the current homosexual idiocy by the ECUSA heiarchy than it has been the cause of the current conflagration in the Roman Catholic Church in this country over homosexual molestation of children by RC clergy. No rational reason there, either, simply unconfronted sin.
10 posted on 08/11/2003 5:21:20 PM PDT by ahadams2 (The Anglican Communion - the next Reformation is beginning NOW)
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To: Between the Lines
soon,it will be okay to have sex with a child over the age of ten....and the dems in congress or the supreme court will make it happen.....so when the pedophiles get caught the parents will then find out its legal to have sex with their ten year old kid..but no one is gonna announce it ahead of time!!!!!!
11 posted on 08/11/2003 6:22:54 PM PDT by fishbabe
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