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Violence in the Age of Social Media | James Densley | TEDxHamlineUniversity 

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When all the world’s a stage, mass shooters, terrorists, street gangs, and hate groups perform violent acts for the notoriety that they bring. Technology has created an economy of consumers, producers, and distributors of violent victimization, and violent offenders want the audience to look before they look away, says criminologist James Densley. Urgent yet hopeful, this talk explores the proliferation of violent content across the internet and the tools we can all use to minimize our exposure and subscription to viral violence.
Criminologist James Densley studies violence so that one day we might not have to. He’s a Professor of Criminal Justice at Metropolitan State University in St. Paul, Minnesota, and a Fellow of the Hamline University Center for Justice and Law, where he co-leads a mass shooter database project funded by the National Institute of Justice.
Lead Videographer: Autumn Vagle
Assistant Videographers: Anna Heckmann, Emma Larson
Introductory Graphic: Jackson Cobb
James Densley is a British-American sociologist. He's a Professor of Criminal Justice at Metropolitan State University and Fellow of the Hamline Center for Justice and Law, where he co-leads the mass shooter database project funded by the National Institute of Justice. Densley has been an invited or keynote speaker on three continents and has received global media attention for his research on street gangs, criminal networks, violence, and policing. He is the author of two books, including the award-winning, How Gangs Work (Palgrave, 2013), and more than 50 articles and book chapters. His writing has also featured for CNN, The Conversation, The Guardian, HuffPost, and The Wall Street Journal. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

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7 май 2019

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Комментарии : 11   
@soul5236
@soul5236 2 года назад
This was so extremely well researched and structured.
@jordanberg8438
@jordanberg8438 5 лет назад
Truly a brilliant mind and an even better human being. "Your attention is your power. When we lead, no one has to bleed."
@rahulkemp8347
@rahulkemp8347 5 лет назад
did he teach u? a great prof
@rn4771
@rn4771 2 года назад
Clear articulation. Thank you !
@handebarlas6248
@handebarlas6248 4 года назад
Thank you very much. I wish this talk was much longer. There is a lot of insight here and I would like to somehow contribute- if this is not a naive idea...Violence is so hard to bear.. a very heavy burden on my shoulders really. That is exactly how I feel yet do not know what-if anything- I can personally do this suffering.
@ceciliamaundu7231
@ceciliamaundu7231 Год назад
Master piece! This is such an enlightening talk
@acon2211
@acon2211 7 месяцев назад
Currently doing researches about all this, glad to find this video, and I love the final idea about "attention is power". I always quote Qui Gon Jinn "Your focus determines your reality".
@spencerbrown6214
@spencerbrown6214 4 года назад
Is there a group I can join for anti-violence in the media? how come it seems like more people don’t care about this issue? the world needs more goodness and media that promotes peace, not dark sadistic programming. TY 🌎
@punkindhouse08
@punkindhouse08 2 года назад
I like this lecture a lot, it's very well structured and reflective. To say nothing of it begin a very urgent topic in our public discourse. That said, I take issue with Densley's statement, "Hate predates the Internet. Before 4Chan, 8Chan, and Reddit, and Gab, it lived a half-life on the fringes of society." This is objectively wrong. If we are to give any credence at all to the liberal argument of systematic oppression, history is littered with dominant forces espousing hatreds which consequently affected the general consensus - including the applicability of violence as a tool for subduing the Other. If anything, brotherhood and fraternity has more often than not been relegated to the fringes, only to emerge again when the violence of the common mob becomes too unstable as a productive means. The most prevalent form of this enabled violence is, of course, war. Moreover, I would argue that the internet has bifurcated and decerebrated any mode of clear thinking on this topic. Human nature cannot be altered in such a quick way that our propensity for violence vanishes. To seek to technologically or biologically engineer this out of our system is also grounds for a serious debate on free will (cf. A Clockwork Orange). So it will always be there. On the other hand, social media in particular re-contextualises our thoughts on violence in a way that seems like it's weaponised. It seems to me that we have to find our honesty about the topic again. Do we want to rid our exposure to violence on the Internet, i.e. sanitise it? Or do we want to make a real-world effect through its exposure? The latter features more limitations since the problem of violence itself is more complex than, say, fixing a piece of technology we constructed ourselves. It really isn't clear how we can properly mediate this yet. From reading an article on the ISIS beheading by Will Self, I think it's fair to say that our first steps would be to start discussing the language of violence. This 'language' is exactly what Densley refers to as 'patterns.' Again, as he states, lets start formulating a language of the effect of media violence from prolonged exposure as it applies to how we enact, manifest, and interact with real-world violence in relation to the individual. Props to Densley for suggesting in the Epilogue that creating a new critical mindset about violence is the key to effectively mediating and moderating our exposure to it on the local level.
@WeerdBeard
@WeerdBeard Год назад
Wow, what a toxic amount of smugness coupled to an alarming lack of substance.
@rahulkemp8347
@rahulkemp8347 4 года назад
oo
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