"Behind multiple forms of cruelty, there's a narrative justifying acting that way. Presser's account of how stories 'beguile and incite us' is compelling scholarship. How people are beguiled into participating in mass harm is an issue that lives depend on."— Arthur W. Frank, author of Letting Stories Breathe
"Presser displays her trademark capacity for expressing intellectually complex ideas in plain English. She brings a vast range of scholarship from the social sciences and humanities into dialogue and magically organizes an entire field of knowledge. Inside Story will become a first port of call for students and established scholars exploring just how culture is tied to violence."—Philip Smith, Professor, Yale Center for Cultural Sociology
"Presser is indubitably a leading voice in the development and expansion of narrative criminology. Presser addresses critical questions of how narratives operate not simply as abstractions but as emotionally laden facilitators of 'played out' political and social harms. Well written and extraordinarily timely in its focus on narratives and harm, it compels us to investigate different types of stories that too often call forth devastating effects."—Lynn S. Chancer, Professor and Executive Officer in Sociology, Graduate Center of the City University of New York
"In this fascinating book, Presser convincingly shows how specific narratives motivate mass harm. Her lessons are crucial as we search for other language and stories that might slow cycles of violence. The book is timely in an era in which populists deploy stories to mobilize followers and stir violence."—Joachim J. Savelsberg, author of Representing Mass Violence
"This book tackles the difficult question of why some stories take such a hold on us while others leave us in a cloud of indifference, and it examines the implications of this question for the current historical moment, which is marked by the rise of populism, terrorism, and fake news. \With careful scholarship and a gift for storytelling, Presser demonstrates not only why but how narratives matter, and what is at stake if we fail to take them seriously."—Molly Andrews, Co-Director of the Centre for Narrative Research, University of East London