Fr. 135.00

Violent Impacts - How Power and Inequality Shape the Concussion Crisis

English · Hardback

Will be released 26.08.2025

Description

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"Kathryn Henne and Matt Ventresca have made a very important contribution to our understanding of what is increasingly recognized as the crisis of concussion. It's not only in sport: this well-argued, well-researched book broadens the field to include marginalized groups all too often left out of the conversation. Scholarly yet accessibly written, this is essential reading for anyone interested in structural violence and the social determinants of health."--Kath Woodward, coauthor of Gender Studies: A Multidisciplinary Approach

"While concussions in professional sports garner headlines, brain injuries remain overlooked across many other realms of life. From the military to intimate partner violence, Henne and Ventresca offer an original, incisive, and much-needed analysis of the forces that shape how we talk--or fail to talk--about concussions and the people they affect."--Kathleen Bachynski, author of No Game for Boys to Play: The History of Youth Football and the Origins of a Public Health Crisis

"Violent Impacts is a fascinating and timely study of an undertheorized phenomenon. Through careful, intersectional, and accessible analysis, the authors show how traumatic brain injury is an assemblage of social, cultural, economic, and biological mattering that cannot be understood without attention to power relations. Violent Impacts deftly addresses the role of racial and gender inequalities in our understanding of brain injuries. Perhaps most importantly, the book draws needed attention to the powerful economic interests putting bodies and brains in harm's way, as well as shaping our collective sense of the nature and acceptability of brain risks."--Victoria Pitts-Taylor, author of The Brain's Body: Neuroscience and Corporeal Politics


About the author










Kathryn Henne is a professor in the School of Regulation and Global Governance at The Australian National University, where she directs the Justice and Technoscience Lab, and an adjunct professor in the College of Health Solutions at Arizona State University.

Matt Ventresca is a researcher in the School of History and Sociology at Georgia Institute of Technology and a visiting fellow in the School of Regulation and Global Governance at The Australian National University.

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