Jacksonville Public Library

Mafia & Mafiosi, origin, power, and myth, Henner Hess ; translated by Ewald Osers

Label
Mafia & Mafiosi, origin, power, and myth, Henner Hess ; translated by Ewald Osers
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 206-218) and indexes
Illustrations
illustrationsmaps
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Mafia & Mafiosi
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
38430363
Responsibility statement
Henner Hess ; translated by Ewald Osers
Sub title
origin, power, and myth
Summary
Henner Hess's classic work, first published almost a quarter century ago, gives a detailed picture of the typical career of mafiosi. Hess describes a distinct subculture whose behavioral patterns have been largely determined by the specific political, economic, and social history of Sicily, a society characterized by a weak state and organized on the basis of self-help. This subculture was and is the breeding ground for the strong-arm man "mafioso" or "uomo d'onore," man of honor, as he is called in Sicily, the proud, taciturn, independent man who believes in the use of violence to achieve personal goals. As a rule, the men come from poor families and rise through violent crime, shrewd diplomacy and the building of a "family" of followers to a respected position of power and wealth. Most important are the mafioso's reciprocal arrangements with politicians and government officials whom he supports in the elections and who protect him from law enforcement. Mafia, popularly conceived as a strictly centralized secret society, is instead proven to be a system of independent families which might on many occasions cooperate, but just as easily be driven to bloody feud. Only in the last decade have there been a number of so-called "pentiti," crown witnesses who cooperate with the criminal justice system. Using their testimonies, an extensive afterword brings the book up to date
Table Of Contents
1. Etymological Note -- 2. Brigantaggio -- Ladrismo -- Mafia -- 3. Characteristics of the Sicilian Social Structure. The political structure. The weakness of the state and the tradition of dual morality. Social Stratification and the economic situation -- 4. The Mafioso. Origin. Career. Consolidation and defence of position. Legitimation and self-assessment -- 5. The Structure of Mafioso Groupings. Cosca. Partito. Faction. Some false conclusions. The system of norms. Some structure patterns -- 6. The Functions of Mafioso Behaviour. Functions for the individual mafioso. Functions within the subcultural system. Mafioso behaviour and politics -- 7. Mafiosi and Gangsters -- 8. Conclusion -- 9. Afterword. From postwar to the 1980s: change and continuity. Structures. Functions
resource.variantTitle
Mafia and Mafiosi
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