Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Preface
- Introduction
- Chapter One To Drink of Death: Tukup's Headhunter Autobiography and the Characteristics of Tribal- Warrior Autobiography
- Chapter Two The Kinds of Street-Gang Autobiography
- Chapter Three The Bubble Reputation: Honor, Glory and Status among the Warriors
- Chapter Four Glory Manifest: Coup Tales, Warrior Boasts and Gangsta Rap
- Chapter Five Brutal Honesty
- Chapter Six The Education of the Warrior
- Chapter Seven The Warrior Choice
- Chapter Eight Mona Ruiz's Two Badges: Women Warriors and Warriors’ Women
- Chapter Nine Sam Blowsnake and the Unfortunate Pottawatomie
- Chapter Ten The Gangbanger Autobiography of Monster Kody (AKA Sanyika Shakur)
- Chapter Eleven Battle, Raid and Stratagem
- Chapter Twelve Berserks and the Tragedy of Warrior Individualism
- Appendix A On Circumcision
- Appendix B A List of All the Tribal Peoples and Street Gangs Mentioned in This Book
- Annotated Bibliography
- Works Cited
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Preface
- Introduction
- Chapter One To Drink of Death: Tukup's Headhunter Autobiography and the Characteristics of Tribal- Warrior Autobiography
- Chapter Two The Kinds of Street-Gang Autobiography
- Chapter Three The Bubble Reputation: Honor, Glory and Status among the Warriors
- Chapter Four Glory Manifest: Coup Tales, Warrior Boasts and Gangsta Rap
- Chapter Five Brutal Honesty
- Chapter Six The Education of the Warrior
- Chapter Seven The Warrior Choice
- Chapter Eight Mona Ruiz's Two Badges: Women Warriors and Warriors’ Women
- Chapter Nine Sam Blowsnake and the Unfortunate Pottawatomie
- Chapter Ten The Gangbanger Autobiography of Monster Kody (AKA Sanyika Shakur)
- Chapter Eleven Battle, Raid and Stratagem
- Chapter Twelve Berserks and the Tragedy of Warrior Individualism
- Appendix A On Circumcision
- Appendix B A List of All the Tribal Peoples and Street Gangs Mentioned in This Book
- Annotated Bibliography
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Peace, or minimally the avoidance of victimization, depended upon a group's ability to inflict more violence than it received.
James Flanagan, on the Rwala Bedoiun (1988: 179)A total of 7288 gang- related homicides occurred in Los Angeles County from 1979 through 1994; Gangrelated homicide rates for African American males aged 15 to 19 years increased to 192.41 per 100,000 population per year in 1989 to 1991.
H. R. Hutson et al. (1995)As an undergraduate I took a course devoted to Beowulf. This tale of honor, courage, betrayal and slaughter made a deep impression on me. But some of my most vivid memories of the course are of the professor. He was a trim, tweed- coated man of about 60. His salt- and- pepper hair was close- cropped. He sat at a table, alternately reading and interpreting. He was a captivating teacher. The poem was very real to him. I remember that he would sometimes grind his teeth as he read the bloodier passages. His interpretations were vivid. And it seemed clear to me that this man's heart beat in sympathy with the poem, that his vitals yearned for a more muscular age, that in his eyes Portland was but a poor, soft place in 1966. I wondered at the time if he was aware how casually Beowulf or Achilles would have burned his house, taken his Chevrolet and his daughter and eaten him for breakfast.
It seems to me now that Tukup's oral autobiography might have proved illuminating for my professor. Tukup was a South American headhunter, a Shuar Indian, a shrinker of human heads (Figure I.1). Tukup's ideas about what is necessary for personal honor and what is necessary in the pursuit of revenge are close to Beowulf ‘s. Still better, perhaps, my professor might have read Monster: The Autobiography of an L. A. Gang Member and some other street- gang autobiographies, because they take us into the mind and the territory of tribal warriors who lived just down the block (Figure I.2). Beowulf and Achilles live at a safe distance in time. Piegan, Crow, Sarsi and Sioux warriors are nearer, but they are bathed in the light of a glorious sunset. Tukup was cutting heads just 60 years ago, but in a remote region of Ecuador.
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- Street-Gang and Tribal-Warrior Autobiographies , pp. 1 - 12Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2018