Chapter 1 Stigmatization as a Tool of Cultural Violence
Abstract
Chapter 1 presents the argument that at the heart of hardline anti-sealing activism is a strategy of stigmatization to both dissuade individuals, business and countries from association with anyone or anything connected to the practice of sealing and to justify and normalize of activist behaviours, actions and attitudes against predominately working class rural and coastal peoples. To unpack the relationship between cultural violence, stigmatization and activism, the chapter introduces the concept of culture. By introducing the meaning of culture the chapter helps to set the stage for the examination in the book on the implications of breaking down the meanings and practices of a group through stigmatizing and alienating them. The chapter goes on to illustrate how the stigmatization of a peoples’ culture can lead to the possible destruction of a group’s cohesion by making group members fearful of, and threatened against, openly expressing or participating in the activities and beliefs that are central to the fabric of the group’s identity.
Keywords
Anti-Sealing Movement, Newfoundland seal hunt; Ocean Conservation; Animal Welfare; anti-sealing activism; Labrador; InuitDOI
10.4324/9781003356158-2ISBN
9781032397900, 9781032433943, 9781003356158Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2023Imprint
RoutledgeClassification
Conservation of the environment
Environmental policy and protocols
Society and culture: general