ABFFE: How did you get involved in the
controversy over media violence?
RHODES: It always seemed to me
intuitively wrong that media exposure influenced violent development. Violence
varies greatly by ethnic group in the United States, for example, even though
we're all exposed to comparable levels of mock violence in US media. Mock
violence is much more extensive in Japanese media than in US but Japan has some
of the lowest rates of criminal violence in the world. But until I encountered
the research of American criminologist Dr. Lonnie Athens, who shows causally
(not merely correlationally) that serious violent behavior is always the result
of having been violently socialized, I had no evidence to back up my intuition.
Athens's work supplied that evidence, as I tried to demonstrate in my 1999 book
Why They Kill.
I was especially offended by the national
political reaction to the Columbine school shootings. To blame that ugly event
on the media, make public pronouncements of concern, endorse dubious research
and leave the field triumphant seemed to me little short of obscene when the
basis of such violence, as Athens's work demonstrates, is society's failure to
prevent the brutalization of children and failure to intervene with support and
help when those brutalized children begin moving toward violence as an answer to
their lack of protection.
So I decided to investigate the media
violence research claims armed with Athens's model. It was no surprise to
discover that they have essentially no evidential support. I was surprised,
however, to find poorly conceived, scientifically inadequate, biased and sloppy
if not actually fraudulent research.
ABFFE: Why has condemning media
violence become so popular among politicians?
RHODES: I can't speak to individual
motive, but it's clear at least that media violence is a popular issue; that
many people would like to believe that it predisposes children to misbehavior
(following in an old tradition that once blamed the novel for subverting young
women's virtue, theater for corrupting the young, comic books for teaching
criminal attitudes and skills--the old tradition, in short, that one
generation's trash is the next generation's art form) and are happy to have some
marginal social science seem to prove them right; that politicians can embrace
the issue and win votes knowing that the First Amendment prevents them from
having to do anything about it. I have even heard politicians say--off the
record--that it's an ideal smokescreen to protect them from having to confront
the much more controversial question of gun control.
ABFFE: Politicians claim that the
scientific evidence that media violence is harmful is as strong as the evidence
that smoking causes cancer. Is that true?
RHODES: The supposed analogy between
smoking/cancer and media violence/violence was invented, so far as I can tell,
by Rowell Huesmann, a professor of psychology at the University of Michigan and
the most prominent current exponent of the media violence theory. I discuss his
work at length in my report "The Media Violence Myth." Huesmann bases
his claim for a similarity on the numerical similarity of the correlations. But
in fact the similarity stops there, at the trivial level of two similar numbers.
Smoking is an identifiable and quantifiable
behavior. Lung cancer is a discrete biological entity which any trained observer
can recognize and which is the outcome of a series of specific biological
processes. Media violence is a social construct that depends entirely on what
one group or individual or another defines it to be. Huesmann considers Three
Stooges comedies to be violent, whereas most of us consider them to be funny. He
considers Roadrunner cartoons to be extremely violent, whereas most of us,
including four-year-olds, recognize that they're comedic fantasies with no
direct connection to the real world. One of the most glaring omissions in
so-called media violence studies is athletic events. Football, hockey and other
sports fill hours of air and cable time, yet none of the studies clock
children's exposure to their real, not mock, violence. So what is media
violence? Not, certainly, a clearly defineable concept.
Nor is "violence" the measure
that Huesmann and others have generally used in their research; rather, they
study what they call "aggression," which they define differently from
one study to the next if they define it at all. Sometimes they seem to be
talking about verbal aggression, sometimes physical, and the physical may vary
from posturing to pushing to hitting. In the real world, of course, aggression
in many contexts is considered to be a virtue, not a vice--ask political
candidates and corporate CEOs whether aggression is a virtue or a social
problem.
Finally, the questionable correlation
Huesmann claims to have found between media violence and violence is based on a
sample of a few hundred people. The correlation between smoking and cancer is
far more robust, with tens and hundreds of thousands of cases in the sample.
Smoking/cancer and media violence/violence
are not comparable correlations.
ABFFE: Why are some social
scientists defending the media violence hypothesis if the evidence is so weak?
RHODES: Social scientists are not
immune from wishful thinking, ambition, inadequate logical skills and yearnings
to ride popular bandwagons in the great morality parade. It's very difficult to
study group behavior in human beings. Correlational studies are about the best
that can be done, and correlations, by definition, do not reveal causes. They
only reveal interesting patterns that may (or may not) lead researchers to
causes. That means the social sciences depend much more heavily on
interpretation than the hard sciences, opening a broad playing field for
mischief, wish fulfillment and deliberate distortion. I found much that I
believe to be unethical and even fraudulent in the media violence research I
investigated.
ABFFE: What are the most useful ways
of reducing youth violence?
RHODES: Athens's identification of
violent socialization as the cause of violent criminality--using a research
methodology that does locate causes and effects--makes it possible to prevent or
interdict violent development. Socialization toward violent criminality begins
with brutalization, usually in childhood (meaning someone violently dominates a
child, the child sees loved ones violently dominated, and the child is coached
that he or she has a personal responbility to use violence to settle disputes).
Brutalization is not the same thing as child abuse (many groups endorse the
violent domination of children and do not identify it as abusive), but child
abuse can be and usually is brutalizing. So the best way to reduce youth
violence is to prevent child brutalization and/or abuse, because children who
are not brutalized never have to confront the choice that lead to violent
criminality.
Programs designed to support medium-risk
families with home visits by experienced mothers or nurses who counsel and coach
have documented success at reducing injuries from abuse. So has the pioneering
development of family community centers in some cities and states. A group of
parents and local service providers in Addison County, Vermont, for example,
started a parent-child community center in 1979 to offer area families services
in the form of educational classes, support groups, child care, playgroups and
recreation. The center also served as a focal point for coordinating the
activities of state and local agencies concerned with children and family
services and offered home visiting and school outreach. After seven years,
teenage pregnancy rates in Addison County fell by 65 percent. The infant
mortality rate was reduced to almost half the state average. Welfare dependency
declined from 40 percent to 17 percent. Incidents of child abuse dropped from 21
percent to 2 percent. The Addison County center and several others like it
proved so successful that Vermont has supported their replication in every
county in the state.
Such family centers offer primary
prevention to entire communities to help stabilize medium-risk families.
Programs of heart-disease prevention similarly target the entire community
rather than focus exclusively on heart-attack victims. High-risk families
obviously need more intensive intervention.
But brutalization is only the first stage,
the initiating trauma, in the four-stage process Athens identified in lengthy
life-history interviews with violent criminals. Three further stages of violent
social experience must follow to turn someone to violent criminality, which is
why many brutalized children do not grow up to be violent adults. Intervention
at any stage along the way can divert the novice from embracing violence, a
decision which is based on a series of choices as well as on success with using
violence first defensively and then offensively.
The second, belligerency stage of
violentization reveals itself in threats, in an emerging cynicism and contempt
(because the people and institutions which are supposed to protect the child
from brutalization have failed him), in bullying and minor violent performances.
The typical fate of belligerent students today in many jurisdictions is to be
expelled from school, but expelling them from school simply throws them back
into the maelstrom and cuts them off from help. Alternative high schools have
been successful at least in part because they offer belligerent students
alternatives, but Athens's evidence that boys usually complete violentization by
the time they are fourteen years old means such help may come too late. We need
alternative middle schools as well, or at least comparable middle-school
programs, perhaps in a community center setting.
Violent coaching crucially influences a
belligerent novice's decision to form his initial defensive violent resolution.
This implies that nonviolent coaching should be an effective intervention
provided that brutalization is not still ongoing.
The Menninger Clinic of Topeka, Kansas, is
developing a Peaceful Schools Project which in pilot form has already documented
dramatic reductions in school violence. The program, which includes defensive
martial-arts training, zero tolerance for bullying and adult and
high-school-student mentoring, evolved pragmatically and ad hoc but hews closely
to Athens's violentization model.
Even at the third, violent performances
stage, when the belligerent student has committed himself or herself to using
serious violence defensively and has begun to do so, intervention is still
possible. The violent performer still has choices to make - crucially, whether
he will expand the range of his violence from defensive to offensive - from
provoked violence to unprovoked. I suspect intervention at this crucial decision
point accounts for the success of the Marine Corps in turning tough kids into
responsible adults. The Marines teach recruits serious violence, but they
constrain it to defensive violence within a code of honor and loyalty to the
Corps. Something similar probably accounts for the success of programs that
reach delinquents through training in the martial arts, which similarly invoke
values of honor and defensive restraint. Athletic coaches in our schools, some
of whom also function as violent coaches, would benefit from incorporating these
distinctive values.
Once violentization is complete - once
someone has committed a serious unprovoked or only minimally provoked violent
criminal act - no one has yet found a reliable therapy or treatment to reverse
it. But most violent crimes are committed by people between the ages of 15 and
30 - new graduates of the violentization process, so to speak - which implies
that many violent individuals deescalate their violence as they grow older. Why
and how they do so, and how they might be helped to make that choice sooner, is
clearly a field ripe for further research now that Athens has demonstrated how
they came to be violent in the first place.
But all the official programs in the world
cannot replace personal witness to civil values; it is by personal witness,
after all, that civil communities maintain their civility and the civilizing
process proceeds that has gradually reduced personal violence in Western
society. Athens's work discredits protestations that violence persists because
of the poverty, race, culture or genetic inheritance of "those people over
there" and has nothing to do with you and me. W. H. Auden once speculated
that "Perhaps everything terrible is in its deepest being something
helpless that wants help from us." Criminal violence emerges from social
experience, most commonly brutal social experience visited upon vulnerable
children, who suffer for our neglect of their welfare and return in vengeful
wrath to plague us. If violence is a choice they make, and therefore their
personal responsibility, as Athens demonstrates it is, our failure to protect
them from having to confront such a choice is a choice we make, just as a
disease epidemic would be implicitly our choice if we failed to provide vaccines
and antibiotics. Such a choice - to tolerate the brutalization of children as we
continue to do - is equally violent and equally evil, and we reap what we sow.
And one way we in the United States avoid
accepting responsibility for the violence in our society is to pretend "the
media" inflict it on our children.