The Strategic Marginalization of Working Class Masculinity in a Batterers' Treatment Programme

Authors

  • Susan Ehrlich York University, Toronto
  • Susan Levesque York University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/genl.v5i2.271

Keywords:

Masculinity, Domestic Violence, Violence Against Women, Identity

Abstract

In this paper, we consider how ideologies about heterosexual working class masculinity play a symbolic role for middle-class, educated men in the context of a batterers’ treatment programme. We suggest that the middle class, educated men who are the focus of this paper create identities for themselves by a process of differentiation, in particular, by distancing themselves from the majority of the men in the batterers’ group who supposedly embody a heterosexual working class masculinity. More specifically, we argue that this kind of identity construction is an integral part of the middle-class men’s accounts of their violence: by differentiating themselves from those who they represent as ‘real abusers’ they manage to diminish and minimize their responsibility for their acts of violence against their domestic partners.

Author Biographies

  • Susan Ehrlich, York University, Toronto

    Susan Ehrlich is Professor of Linguistics in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics at York University, Toronto. She has published articles in the areas of discourse analysis, language and gender and the law in journals such as Language in Society, Journal of Sociolinguistics and Discourse & Society. Her books include Point of View: A Linguistic Analysis of Literary Style (Routledge, 1990), Representing Rape: Language and Sexual Consent (Routledge, 2001) and the co-edited collection (with Alice Freed) ‘Why Do You Ask?’ The Function of Questions in Institutional Discourse (Oxford, 2010).

  • Susan Levesque, York University

    Sue Levesque has taught in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics at York University, Toronto and is a former doctoral student in the graduate programme in Women’s Studies at York. Her research interests are in the area of gender and language. Currently, Sue is working in an administrative role as Executive Director of the York University/Toronto Dominion Community Engagement Centre, an off-campus teaching, research and resource centre designed to facilitate community-university partnerships that lead to mutual capacity building.

Published

2011-12-20

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Ehrlich, S., & Levesque, S. (2011). The Strategic Marginalization of Working Class Masculinity in a Batterers’ Treatment Programme. Gender and Language, 5(2), 271-301. https://doi.org/10.1558/genl.v5i2.271