The Guilt Project: Rape, Morality and Law
By (Author) Vanessa Place
Other Press LLC
Other Press LLC
15th August 2015
United States
General
Non Fiction
Law: Human rights and civil liberties
Civics and citizenship
Crime and criminology
345.02532
Paperback
336
Width 138mm, Height 208mm
377g
Vanessa Place examines the ambiguity of rape law by presenting cases where guilt lies, but lies uneasily, and leads into larger ethical questions of what defines guilt, what is justice and what is considered just punishment. The Guilt oThe Guilt Projectu looks at the way the American legal system defines, prosecutes and punishes sex offenders, how this questionable justice has transformed our conception of who is guilty and how they ought to be treated, and how this has come to undo our deeper humanity.
A California appellate attorney looks at crime and punishment under our sex laws Place expands the notion of guilt, examining its other dimensionsfactual, ethical, moraland asks whether weve allowed dubious science, conflicting cultural messages and out-of-control political passions to distort our sex laws...Place detects something desperate in all this, and in richly allusive, frequently witty prose, she asks important questions about what it is exactly we want from our criminal laws. A sophisticated, brave look at a topic that too often provokes merely panic, prejudice and posturing.Kirkus Reviews
"A brilliant criminal defense attorney, Vanessa Place has produced a deeply personal yet meticulously researched argument that demands serious consideration by policy makers, journalists, social scientists, and informed citizens. For some, her book will inspire a thorough rethinking of how they understand rapists and their places in the criminal justice system. For others, the candid accounts and bold proposals in The Guilt Project will inspire mainly frustration or even anger. But no honest reader can deny the special insights she provides from her years of experience and careful reflection."Barry Glassner, author of The Culture of Fear and Professor of Sociology, University of Southern California
"Judging by The Guilt Project, Vanessa Place is one tough defense attorney, though her wicked prose implies at times the soul of an angry poet. Her thesis that injustice is routinely perpetrated on sex criminals will not be popularwhich is why her book should be read by anyone interested in criminology, specifically including legislators, judges, attorneys and prosecutors." Robert Mayer, author of The Dreams of Ada: A True Story of Murder, Obsession, and a Small Town
Vanessa Place is a writer and criminal appellate attorney practicing in Los Angeles. She has worked on the appeals of more than a thousand indigent felons, specializing in sex offenders and sexually violent predators. She is the author of Dies: A Sentence, a fifty-thousand-word, one-sentence prose poem; the post-conceptual novel La Medusa; and, in collaboration with appropriation poet Robert Fitterman, Notes on Conceptualisms. Place is co-founder of Les Figues Press, described by critic Terry Castle as an elegant vessel for experimental American writing of an extraordinarily
assured and ingenious sort.