Spare the Child: The Religious Roots of Punishment and the Psychological Impact of Physical AbuseGreven explores the religions and secular rationals for the physical punishment of children in America and challenges us to reexamine long-held assumptions. |
Contents
Moral Suasion and Nonviolence | 14 |
Memories of Pain and Punishments | 22 |
RELIGIOUS RATIONALES | 46 |
Copyright | |
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acknowledge adolescence adults advocates aggression Alexander Alice Miller American anger apocalyptic authoritarianism authority beaten beatings behavior behaviorists believe Benjamin Spock Bible Billy Graham Bushnell century child abuse Child-Rearing Concepts childhood experiences Christian Family coercion consequences corporal punishment David Wilkerson delinquency depression Disorder dissociative early Effects of Punishment Eighth Amendment emotional enduring Erin Pizzey evangelical evidence Excerpts explored Fanny and Alexander fantasies father Favell fear feelings Ferenczi forms Freud Fugate fundamentalist Gelles Glueck Greven hate hell Houten hurt Hyles impulses Ingraham ishment Jack Hyles Jesus Larry Christenson Lessin lives memories ment mother multiple personalities murderous never Newsom noted obedience obey observed obsessive paddling paranoia parents physical punishments Pizzey Protestant Temperament psyches rage rationales recognized religious Reprinted by permission Rincover roots sadomasochism sadomasochistic schools Schreber sexual shaped Shapiro Side Effects spanking Spock studies suffering Sybil traumas University Press violence against children whipping Wigglesworth Wilkerson Wright York