图书简介
The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Crime, Media and Popular Culture is a collection of over 120 entries written by an assembly of nearly 200 leading international scholars. It asks how do people imagine crime and punishment? How do they go about thinking of deviance and reactions to it? To answer this, contributors look at media influences on the ways people think about crime and punishment -- influences that include photography, movies, newspapers, detective novels, television, graphic arts, broadsides, myth, paintings, murals, the internet, and social media. It offers a foundational space for understanding the cultural life, imaginative force, and power of crime and punishment.
Historical; 1. The Cultural Afterlife of Criminal Evidence; 2. Cultural Representations of 19th-Century Prostitution; 3. Cultural Representations of Torture; 4. Folk Devils and Folk Heroes: the Janus face of the robber in popular culture; 5. Framing Terrorism; 6. Gangsters and Genre; 7. Historical Approaches to the Study of Crime, Media, and Popular Culture; 8. Historical Representations of Crime and the Criminal; 9. Infanticide in 19th-Century England; 10. Moral Panics; 11. Music of the 1960s and Social Justice: Masterpieces of American Protest Songs and Why They Matter in the Trump Era; 12. Organized Crime Mythologies; 13. The (In)visibility of Race in 20th-Century Crime Films; 14. True Crime Reporting in Early Modern England; 15. Vengeance in Popular Culture; Aspects of the criminal justice system; 1. A Genre Study of Prosecutors and Criminal Defense Lawyers in American Movies and Television; 2. American Lawyer and Courtroom Comedies; 3. American Trial Films and the Popular Culture of Law; 4. Biplanes, Satellites, and Drones: A High Resolution History of Eyes in the Sky; 5. Capital Punishment, Closure, and Media; 6. Culture of Punishment in the USA; 7. False Confessions in Popular Culture; 8. Feminist Perspectives on Criminal Justice in Popular Culture; 9. Guilt or Innocence: Lessons About the Legal Process in American Courtroom Films; 10. Human Trafficking and the Media in the United States; 11. Images of Alternative Justice; 12. Politics of Vision in the Carceral State: Legibility and Looking in Hostile Territory; 13. Juries in Film and Television; 14. Lawyers and Courts in French Popular Culture; 15. Miscarriages of Justice; 16. Military Justice in Film; 17. Nazi Justice in Popular Legal Culture; 18. Prison Life and Popular Culture; 19. Representations of Criminal Justice and Its Institutions; 20. Security and Surveillance in Film; 21. Solitary Confinement in Popular Culture; 22. Television Judge Shows; 23. Terrorism and Counter-terrorism in Popular Culture in the Post-9/11 Context; 24. The CSI Effect; 25. The Legal System in German Popular Culture; 26. The Police, Media, and Popular Culture in the USA; 27. Trials for Genocide and War Crime in Popular Culture; Aspects of criminology; 1. Copycat Crime; 2. Corpses, Popular Culture, and Forensic Science; 3. Crime and Celebrity; 4. Crime and Masculinity in Popular Culture; 5. Crime and Visual Media in Brazil; 6. Crimesploitation; 7. Criminal Underworlds; 8. Cultural Criminology; 9. Dark Tourism; 10. Dark Tourism, Penal Landscapes, and Criminological Inquiry; 11. Feminist Criminology and the Visual; 12. Foucault and the Visual Reconstitution of Criminological Knowledge; 13. Gothic Criminology; 14. Green Criminology, Culture, and Cinema; 15. Ideology in the Crime Genre; 16. Narrative Criminology: Crime as Produced by and Re-Lived Through Narratives; 17. Neighborhood Context and Media Representations of Crime; 18. Popular Criminology; 19. Psychopathy and the Media; 20. Street Cultures; 21. Transgressive Imaginations; 22. Visual Criminology; 23. Visual Representations of Genocide; 24. Visuality and Criminology; 25. White Collar Crime in Popular Culture; 26. Witnessing and Victimhood; 27. Wound Culture; Offenses; 1. Abortion in American Film since 2001; 2. Bank Robbery in Popular Culture; 3. Car Crimes and the Cultural Imagination; 4. Clergy Sexual Abuse and the Media; 5. Drugs and Popular Culture; 6. Fakes and Forgeries in Art, and the More Specific Term Art Fraud: A Criminological Perspective; 7. Filicide in Australian Media and Culture; 8. Graffiti; 9. Homicide in Television Drama Series; 10. Journalistic Depictions of Violence against Women in India; 11. Journalistic Depictions of Violence against Women in Mexico; 12. Media Representations of Domestic Violence; 13. Moral Regulation and Media Representations of the Female Body; 14. Offensive Language Crimes in Law, Media, and Popular Culture; 15. Organized Child Sexual Abuse in the Media; 16. Pornification and the Mainstreaming of Sex; 17. Pussy Riot and the Politics of Resistance in Contemporary Russia; 18. Representations of Public Sex in Crime, Media, and Popular Culture; 19. Resistance in Popular Culture; 20. School Shootings in the Media; 21. Serial Killing and Representation; 22. Sex Crime and the Media; 23. Sexting; 24. Social Media, Vigilantism, and Indigenous People in Australia; 25. The Criminalization of Homosexuality in Popular Cinema; 26. The Cultural Politics of Indigenous Struggles and Aboriginal Riots; 27. The Global Traffic in Looted Cultural Objects; Mediums; 1. A Critical Introduction to Arts Behind Bars; 2. Big Data and Visuality; 3. Content Analysis in the Study of Crime, Media, and Popular Culture; 4. Crime Dramas as Social Science Fiction; 5. Crime Fiction; 6. Crime Films; 7. Crime News in Newspapers; 8. Crime News on TV; 9. Crime, Justice, and Anglo-American Comics; 10. Cultural Studies Approaches to the Study of Crime in Film and on Television; 11. Cultural Studies Approaches to the Study of Crime in Literature; 12. Documentaries about Crime and Criminal Justice; 13. Experimental Design in the Study of Crime, Media, and Popular Culture; 14. Feminist Themes in Television Crime Dramas; 15. Film Noir; 16. Methodological Approaches to Studying Crime and Popular Culture in New Media; 17. News Media and African Genocide; 18. Nordic Noir; 19. Online Crime; 20. Police Dramas on Television; 21. Reality TV Crime Programs; 22. Spatialization and Carceral Geographies; 23. Sports Crime and Popular Culture; 24. Survey Research and the Study of Crime, Media, and Popular Culture; 25. Video Gaming, Crime, and Popular Culture; 26. Violence, Media Effects, and Criminology
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