
Punishment and Shame: A Philosophical Study
Author(s): Wendy C. Hamblet (Author)
- Publisher: Lexington Books (UK)
- Publication Date: 16 Jan. 2011
- Language: English
- Print length: 210 pages
- ISBN-10: 0739149369
- ISBN-13: 9780739149362
Book Description
One of the favorite forms of didactic pain to which legitimate authorities turn, in teaching conformity to social regulations, is the psychological pain of shame. Shame is a special favorite in the penology of societies of the Western world, whose governing logic is already grounded in the shame-based religions of Judaism and Christianity. Parents, school teachers, religious leaders, and state authorities readily employ shame as an effective method for teaching social lessons. Shame is a powerful force that reaches deep into the psyche of the offender and gnaws away at her sense of self-worth and identity, with longstanding and devastating existential effects. Shame has profound and enduring effects, because it has the capacity to transform an empirical fact (of
having done something unacceptable) into an ontological reality (of being unacceptable as a human being). Shame dehumanizes.Shame is a powerfully effective tool for altering behavior, but because shame dehumanizes, it often fails to have the effect that the punisher is seeking to bring about. Shame sickens souls, rather than cures them. It sickens them to such a degree that shame more often acts as a promoter of criminality than as a teacher of the social good.
Editorial Reviews
Review
Hamblet here offers ”a genealogy of punishment,” an attempt to understand punishment through its history; this study offers, among other delights, a fundamental critique of Foucault”s famous attempt to do the same. — Michael Davis, Professor of Philosophy, Illinois Institute of Technology
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