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  2. Full Service (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_Service_(book)

    Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and the Secret Sex Lives of the Stars is a 2012 "tell-all" book about the sex lives of Hollywood stars from the late 1940s to the early 1980s by Scotty Bowers, with Lionel Friedberg as a contributing author. Bowers makes many claims about the sex lives of many people, most of whom were associated with ...

  3. Monopoly on violence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly_on_violence

    In political philosophy, a monopoly on violence or monopoly on the legal use of force is the property of a polity that is the only entity in its jurisdiction to legitimately use force, and thus the supreme authority of that area . While the monopoly on violence as the defining conception of the state was first described in sociology by Max ...

  4. Rising Up and Rising Down - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rising_Up_and_Rising_Down

    Rising Up and Rising Down is a wide-ranging study of the justifications for and consequences of violence. The seven-volume edition is divided between essays analyzing the actions and motivations of historical figures (including Napoleon, Abraham Lincoln, John Brown, Robespierre, Cortés, Trotsky, Stalin, and Gandhi) and pieces of journalism and reportage that act as contemporary "case studies ...

  5. On Aggression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_Aggression

    On Aggression. On Aggression ( German: Das sogenannte Böse. Zur Naturgeschichte der Aggression, "So-called Evil: on the natural history of aggression") is a 1963 book by the ethologist Konrad Lorenz; it was translated into English in 1966. [ 1] As he writes in the prologue, "the subject of this book is aggression, that is to say the fighting ...

  6. Violence in literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Violence_in_literature

    Violence in literature refers to the recurrent use of violence as a storytelling motif in classic and contemporary literature, both fiction and non-fiction. [1] Depending on the nature of the narrative, violence can be represented either through graphic descriptions or psychological and emotional suffering.

  7. Broken windows theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broken_windows_theory

    [citation needed] Still many would agree that reducing crime and violence begins with maintaining social control/order. [ 18 ] Jane Jacobs ' The Death and Life of Great American Cities is discussed in detail by Ranasinghe, and its importance to the early workings of broken windows, and claims that Kelling's original interest in "minor offences ...

  8. Victim blaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victim_blaming

    Victim blaming occurs when the victim of a crime or any wrongful act is held entirely or partially at fault for the harm that befell them. [1] There is historical and current prejudice against the victims of domestic violence and sex crimes, such as the greater tendency to blame victims of rape than victims of robbery if victims and perpetrators knew each other prior to the commission of the ...

  9. History of Violence (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Violence_(novel)

    Told in first-person narration, the novel presents its events in a nonlinear format. The narrator, Édouard, recounts a sexual encounter in Paris on Christmas Eve. The encounter culminates in a violent rape and robbery. Édouard subsequently reports the crime to the police, which causes him more trauma.