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1

Engel, Howard. A victim must be found. Markham, Ont: Viking, 1988.

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2

A victim must be found. Long Preston: Magna, 1989.

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3

A victim must be found. London: V. Gollancz, 1988.

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4

Engel, Howard. A victim must be found. Markham, Ont: Viking, 1988.

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5

A victim must be found. Markham, Ont: Penguin, 1989.

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6

A victim must be found. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1988.

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7

Souad and Souad. Burned alive: A victim of the law of men. New York: Warner Books, 2004.

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8

Williams, Armstrong. Letters to a young victim: Hope and healing in America's inner cities. New York: Free Press Paperbacks published by Simon & Schuster, 1996.

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9

T, Harris Grant, and Rice Marnie, eds. Risk assessment for domestically violent men: Tools for criminal justice, offender intervention, and victim services. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, 2010.

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10

Nilsson, Malin. Suspect, detainee, or victim?: A discourse analytical study of men's vulnerability in Thailand's deep south. Lund: Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, Lund University, 2015.

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11

Hilton, N. Zoe, Grant T. Harris, and Marnie E. Rice. Risk assessment for domestically violent men: Tools for criminal justice, offender intervention, and victim services. Washington: American Psychological Association, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/12066-000.

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12

Diagnosis and treatment of the young male victim of sexual abuse. Springfield, Ill., U.S.A: C.C. Thomas, 1992.

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13

Re-thinking men: Heroes, villains and victims. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2009.

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14

The best victim. Seattle: Montlake Romance, 2014.

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15

Pizzey, Erin. Women or men - who are the victims? London: CIVITAS : Institute for the Study of Civil Society, 2000.

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16

Burton, Mary. The seventh victim. New York: Kensington Pub. Corp., 2013.

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17

Lunch med Victor Borge: Med, om och runt omkring världens roligaste man. Stockholm: Carlsson, 2009.

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18

Birt, Chris. All the commissioner's men. Taupo, N.Z: Stentorian Pub., 2012.

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19

Charmer: A ladies' man and his victims. New York: W. Morrow, 1994.

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20

The Victor. [Place of publication not identified]: Nicole Flockton, 2015.

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21

Men surviving incest: A male survivor shares on the process of recovery. Walnut Creek, Calif: Launch Press, 1989.

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22

Orwig, Sara. Victima de su engano. Madrid [Spain]: Harlequin Iberica, 2009.

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23

Pritchard, Jacki. Male victims of elder abuse: Their experiences and needs. London: Kingsley, 2001.

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24

Lew, Mike. Victims no longer: Men recovering from incest and other sexual child abuse. London: Cedar, 1993.

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25

Lew, Mike. Victims no longer: Men recovering from incest and other sexual child abuse. New York, N.Y: Nevraumont Pub. Co., 1988.

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26

Lew, Mike. Victims no longer: Men recovering from incest and other sexual child abuse. New York: Perennial Library, 1990.

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27

Lew, Mike. Victims no longer: Men recovering from incest and other sexual child abuse. New York: Harper & Row, 1990.

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28

Orlandersmith, Dael. Black n blue boys/Broken men. New York, NY: Dramatists Play Service Inc., 2014.

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29

McEvoy, Alan W. If she is raped: A guidebook for the men in her life. Newport, Ore: Teal Ribbon Publications, 2008.

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30

Saul, Bellow. Novels, 1944-1953: Dangling man ; The victim ; The adventures of Augie March. New York: Library of America, 2003.

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31

Bear, Euan. Adults molested as children: A survivor's manual for women & men. Orwell, VT (Shoreham Depot Rd., RR #1, Box 24-B, Orwell 05760-9756): Safer Society Press, 1988.

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32

Victims no longer: The classic guide for men recovering from sexual child abuse. 2nd ed. New York: Quill, 2004.

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33

Estrangement. London: Heinemann Educational, 1986.

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34

Man of bone. Toronto: Emblem Editions, 2002.

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35

Akpan, Uwem. Jiu shuo ni he ta men yi yang =: Say you're one of them. [Nanjing]: Jiangsu wen yi chu ban she, 2010.

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36

Nice, Suzanne. Childhood sexual abuse: A survivor's guide for men. [Center City, MN (Pleasant Valley Rd., P.O. Box 176, Center City 55012-0176)]: Hazelden, 1990.

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37

Souad. Burned Alive: A Victim of the Law of Men. Grand Central Publishing, 2004.

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38

Norwood, Richard, Joe Howlett, and Sherrie Decker. Brave Men Sometimes Cry: A Tribute to Marge Howlett, Multiple Sclerosis Victim. Vantage Pr, 2000.

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39

Johnston, Timothy, and Donald Macgregor. His Own Man : Otto Peltzer: Champion Athlete, Nazi Victim, Indian Hero. Pitch Publishing (Brighton) Limited, 2016.

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40

Henley, Megan. Who are you?: With one click she found her perfect man, and he found his perfect victim. 2016.

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41

Bricker, Donald Gordon. Bringing the victim/victimizer co-existence to life: Therapists' reflections upon their work with men who batter and who have experienced childhood victimization. 2000.

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42

Belser, Julia Watts. Conquered Bodies in the Roman Bedroom. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190600471.003.0003.

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This chapter examines tales of beautiful Jewish men and women taken captive by Rome. In these stories, beauty performs potent cultural work. Through sexualized narratives that portray the captive Jew as victim of Roman greed, Bavli Gittin makes use of a common Roman moral trope—concern for luxuria, an insatiable desire for luxury that is also expressed in lust and licentiousness—to critique elite Roman decadence and moral degradation. These stories also reveal a striking departure from the conventional beauty politics of rabbinic culture. Elsewhere, the Babylonian Talmud frequently portrays women’s beauty as a source of spiritual danger to rabbinic men. By contrast, Bavli Gittin portrays the beautiful woman as a victim, not a threat. Amidst situations of overt Roman violence, Bavli Gittin affirms the moral innocence of violated men and women who are subjected to the conqueror’s lust.
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43

Dolan, Chris. Victims Who are Men. Edited by Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Naomi Cahn, Dina Francesca Haynes, and Nahla Valji. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199300983.013.8.

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This chapter explores the exclusion of civilian men from discussions of gender violence and gender inequality in conflict situations. It argues that progress toward including men in policy and legal discourse has been stunted, despite repeated attempts to challenge the silencing of men’s experiences. The chapter demonstrates how men can be simultaneously victims and perpetrators of sexual violence. It also highlights the importance of interrogating data collection methods in sexual violence studies. Reassessments of such statistics show that men are more frequently victims of sexual violence than had been previously assumed. To create alternative models of justice, this chapter calls for a conceptual shift that recognizes the gender-based harms men experience in conflict.
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44

Mitchell, Koritha. The Pimp and Coward. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036491.003.0007.

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This chapter demonstrates that, as a genre, lynching drama challenges the assumption that men establish literary traditions and women revise them. Black male authors entered the genre in 1925, and they revised the conventions being developed by women. Women's plays present the home as the lynch victim, portraying its “castration” as the moment when the honorable black man is removed. However, male dramatists depict homes that seem “castrated” even when husbands, fathers, and uncles survive because they become immoral and cowardly to avoid the mob's wrath. The chapter argues that the pimp and coward emerge to mark the community conversation's acknowledgement that their perspectives matter as African Americans grapple with the contradictions of living with lynching.
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45

Churchill, Robert Paul. Women in the Crossfire. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190468569.001.0001.

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Every year, thousands of girls and women die, often at the hands of blood relatives. These victims are accused of committing honor violations that bring shame upon their family—such transgressions range from walking with a boy in their neighborhood to seeking to marry a man of their own choosing to being a victim of rape. Women in the Crossfire presents a thorough examination of honor killing, an age-old social practice through which women are trapped and subjected to terror and deadly violence as consequences of the evolution of dysfunctional patriarchal structures and competition among men for domination. To understand the practice of honor killing, its root causes, and possibilities for protection and prevention, this book considers the issues from a variety of perspectives (epistemic, anthropological, sociological, cultural, ethical, historical, psychological, etc.) and makes use of original research—an analysis of a database of honor killing cases, published here for the first time. Specifically, the book addresses the salient traits and trends present in honor killing incidents and examines how honor is understood in sociocultural contexts where these killings occur. It illuminates socialization factors within honor-shame cultures that include gender construction, child-rearing practices, and adverse experiences that prime boys and men to take roles as one-day killers of sisters, daughters, and wives in the name of honor. In addition to this microcausal pathway, the book relies on theories of cultural evolution to explain how honor killing was an adaptation to specific ecological challenges and co-evolved with other patriarchic institutions.
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46

Burton, Mary. Seventh Victim. Penguin Random House, 2018.

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47

Victor Man. JRP Ringier Kunstverlag AG, 2008.

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48

The seventh victim. 2013.

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49

Ryerse, Phyllis. Rich Men Poor Men: The Ryersons on the Titanic. Amberley Publishing, 2012.

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50

Smith, Daniel P., and Michael L. Varnado. Victims of Dead Man Walking. Pelican Publishing Company, 2003.

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