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Journal Article

Citation

Dunn JL. Sociol. Compass 2008; 2(5): 1601-1620.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1751-9020.2008.00150.x

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This paper reviews research and theory on the social construction of victims and victimization. There are four areas of inquiry: victims’ self-processes, the collaborative accomplishment of victimization, social problems claims-making, and social movement framing. Scholars in each area take a symbolic interactionist perspective. Because victimization is potentially stigmatizing, much of this research and analysis draws on the literature on vocabularies of motive, aligning activities, and accounts. Literature on self-processes examines how victims come to see themselves as victims and their situations as deviant. Often, when they try to establish their victim identities with others, they can be discredited or blamed if they do not meet expectations of typical victims. When people want to show that a social problem exists, they use images of victims to evoke sympathy and other emotions. Sometimes, collective identities may not be sympathetic, and also need to be managed, through the framing work of activists.

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