“Organizing her work around children and youth, Adrienne Carey Hurley opens up new ways of conducting cross-cultural work between Japan and the United States. Instead of comparing national cultures and negotiating similarities and differences, Hurley effectively shows how the appetite for representational violence (that necessarily relates to the experience of real violence shared by many youth in Japan and the United States) must be studied as a single phenomenon, one that cannot be split up, and thus neutralized, by overemphasis on national particularities.”—Eric Cazdyn, author of The Flash of Capital: Film and Geopolitics in Japan
“This is one of the most unsettling scholarly works I have ever read. Adrienne Carey Hurley has produced a far-reaching, audacious meditation on violence that cannot be reconciled with existing therapeutic regimes, adult-centered political movements, or progressive antiviolence agendas. Her willingness to move her analysis across texts, state geographies, institutional forms, historical contexts, and racial subjectivities is awe inspiring. It is no exaggeration to say that my political identity has been permanently altered by this book.”—Dylan Rodríguez, author of Suspended Apocalypse: White Supremacy, Genocide, and the Filipino Condition
“Revolutionary Suicide and Other Desperate Measures is movingly humane and passionately political. Hurley’s compassionate approach to the topics of child abuse and youth violence, underresearched in the field of Japan studies, transcends the limiting framework of juvenile delinquency and those very tropes about children and youth that are criticized in this study.”
-- Eiko Maruko Siniawer Journal of Japanese Studies
“Hurley appeals to those committed to building intergenerational movements for radical social change and transformative justice. Her interdisciplinary analysis will benefit the work of a wide range of actors, from youth advocates, teachers, and social workers to scholars in the newly emerging field of girlhood studies as well as those specializing in the sociology of youth culture.”
-- Lena Carla Palacios McGill Journal of Education
"What Hurley’s work does is expose the ways in which this reality is masked by the self-soothing message that all children are worthy of protection and that protection will be maintained at all costs. That message alone makes this book a worthy read."
-- Bethany Sharpe Human Rights Review