
New Books in Critical Theory Sarah Schulman, “Conflict is Not Abuse: Overstating Harm, Community Responsibility, and the Duty of Repair” (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2016)
11 snips
May 4, 2018 Sarah Schulman, novelist, playwright, filmmaker, and Distinguished Professor of English, explores how claims of harm are weaponized to punish marginalized people. She links family and group dynamics to state violence, critiques punitive responses, and advocates delay, mutual accountability, and community-based repair. Conversations range from online conflict to Palestine solidarity and the politics of victimhood.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Abuse Language Used To Avoid Accountability
- Powerful actors appropriate the language of abuse to justify punitive measures and avoid accountability.
- Schulman links family homophobia, state violence, and national victim narratives as the same negative group dynamic.
Publishing Rejection Then Grassroots Success
- Conflict Is Not Abuse was rejected widely in the U.S. and published by Arsenal Pulp Press in Canada.
- The book reached large grassroots audiences via Goodreads and Facebook despite mainstream rejections.
From Community Repair To State Punishment
- The state absorbed community responses to violence as grassroots programs were bureaucratized and defunded.
- That shift normalized punishment and made police the default conflict arbiter despite their violence and domestic-abuse rates.






