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Monsters, Law, Crime: Explorations in Gothic Criminology [Kõva köide]

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Monsters, Law, Crime, an edited collection composed of essays written by prominent U.S. and international experts in Law, Criminology, Sociology, Anthropology, Communication and Film, constitutes a rigorous attempt to explore fertile interdisciplinary inquiries into monsters and monster-talk, and law and crime. Monsters may refer to allegorical or symbolic fantastic beings (as in literature, film, legends, myths, etc.), or actual or real life monsters, as well as the interplay/ambiguity between the two general types of monsters. This edited collection thus explores and updates contemporary discussions of the emergent and evolving fronts of monster theory in relation to cutting-edge research on law and crime, and may be seen as extensions of a Gothic Criminology, generally construed. Gothic Criminology refers to a theoretical framework initially developed by Caroline Joan Kay S. Picart, a Philosophy and Film professor turned Attorney and Law professor, and Cecil Greek, a Sociologist (Picart and Greek 2008). Succinctly paraphrased, noting the proliferation of Gothic modes of narration and visualization in American popular culture, academia and even public policy, Picart and Greek proposed a framework, which they described as a Gothic Criminology to attempt to analyze the fertile lacunae connecting the real and the reel in the flow of Gothic metaphors and narratives that abound around criminological phenomena that populate not only popular culture but also academic and public policy discourses.

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Monsters, Law, Crime reminds us in a graphic way how different societies have taken their fears of the out-of-the ordinary and portrayed and treated those deemed to be "other". They range from victims of misogyny in Israel and Jihadists through the mentally ill in Victorian Britain to modern day medical serial killers. There is much more besides. How the media over the years have responded to a variety of challenges to social norms is the subject of this collection. This happens in crime narratives, newspapers, television and film. These essays provide a fascinating kaleidoscope of how the various media have adopted the monster form as a way of showing these challenges. This is an absorbing collection of essays which shifts the focus away from the mundanity of the deviance encountered on a daily basis in the justice process. It shows how Stan Cohen's Folk Devils have both a rich tradition across cultures and a likely long-term future. The contexts of the moral panics change but the resort to the demonisation of the other is a recurrent feature which this collection effectively illustrates. -- Peter Robson, School of Law, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: Explorations in Gothic Criminology: Ruminating on Monsters, Law and Crime 1(18)
Caroline Joan "Kay" S. Picart
PART I OF MYTHS AND MONSTERS
1 "Deeds of Treachery and Violence and Lust and Cruelty": Revisiting Freud's Primal Crimes in Aboriginal Central Australia
19(22)
John Morton
2 Criminal Anthropology, Fabulism, and Criminology's Unacknowledged Teratological Lineage
41(22)
Jon Frauley
3 Vampire Fictions and the Conflation of Violent Criminality with Real Vampirism: A Practical Overview
63(18)
John Edgar Browning
D.J. Williams
PART II CONTAGION, MONSTROSITY, ETHICS
4 A Double-Tap "Lilith Moral Panic" in Israel, 2014: How Labeling Others as "Monsters" Conceals Their Victimization
81(16)
Orit Kamir
5 Evil-By-Proxy and Everyday Monsters: Toward a Moral Sociology for Overcoming the Passive Observation of Evil
97(24)
Michael Hviid Jacobsen
6 Monstering Madness: Criminal Lunatics in Broadmoor 1863--1913
121(20)
Lucy Williams
Sandra Walklate
Barry Godfrey
III MONSTERS IN REEL/REAL LIFE
7 The Purge, or Law of the Universal Monstrous
141(22)
Matthew Sorrento
8 Contrasting Depictions of Medical Serial Killers: Doctors Petiot and Shipman from the Manic to the Mundane
163(20)
Steve Greenfield
9 The Redactasaurus Chronicles: Fear, Consumption and Graffiti in Capital City
183(22)
Deborah Landry
IV LAW, WAR, AND MONSTROUS DISCOURSES
10 Human Trafficking, Empathy for Victims, the Tool of Eradication
205(18)
D.W. Duke
11 Visualizing Monsters and Just Wars in Legal and Public Analyses of Eastwood's American Sniper
223(22)
Marouf Hasian Jr.
12 Monstrous Discourses, Jihadi Cool, and Emergent Counter-Terrorist Narratives: The Case of Ahmad Khan Rahami (a.k.a. Ahmad Rahimi) and the 2016 New York/New Jersey Bombings
245(36)
Caroline Joan "Kay" S. Picart
Postscript: Gothic Criminology's Evolving Frontiers 281(10)
Cecil Greek
Index 291(4)
About the Editor and Contributors 295
Caroline Joan Kay S. Picart is Attorney at Law practicing in criminal and family law and is Adjunct Professor of Law at Florida A & M University, Orlando, Florida.