TY - BOOK AU - Murphy, Clare TI - Men's intimate partner abuse and control: reconciling paradoxical masculinities and social contradictions PY - 2009/// KW - FVC KW - ABUSIVE MEN KW - CULTURAL ISSUES KW - DOMESTIC VIOLENCE KW - GENDER DIFFERENCE KW - GENDER KW - MEN KW - OFFENDERS KW - PHYSICAL ABUSE KW - PSYCHOLOGICAL ABUSE KW - INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE KW - NEW ZEALAND N1 - au N2 - Thesis (PhD - Law) - Queensland University of Technology, 2009. This doctoral thesis aims to deepen predominant ways of thinking about men's intimate partner abuse by using a theoretical framework compatible with contemporary feminist scholarship. The author synthesises Cornell's theory of masculinities with Bourdieu's field theory in order to explore complex understandings of manliness and men's relationship with other adults and social structures. The thesis is based on in-depth interviews with 16 able bodied men of European ancestry born and educated in New Zealand or Australia who have been physically violent and/ or emotionally, intellectually, sexually or financially controlling of a live-in female partner. The author finds men's perpetration of power and control over women is driven by their need to avoid the stigma of appearing weak. Consequently they suppress their desire to show love and empathy to pursue a presumed honourable manliness, looking for acceptance from other men. The research also explores the interplay between masculine practices and social contexts. For example, the practices of those in authority influence the decision making of the men in the study with respect to whether they use physical or psychological violence. The author concludes that for intimate partner abuse to cease, changes in power structures must occur at all levels in society UR - https://files.vine.org.nz/koha-files/PhD_Thesis_C_Murphy.pdf ER -