{"title":"真实犯罪的犯罪控制畅销书","authors":"Sara M. Walsh","doi":"10.1080/17521483.2023.2263240","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTIn criminology, social and legal eras are often referred to as dominated by either due process or crime control narratives. In general, crime control narratives focus on the need for tough-on-crime policies and on the terror of criminals wreaking havoc in society. By contrast, due process narratives focus on the need to move slowly and methodically through our justice process to avoid mistakes and violations of human rights. These eras swing back and forth, neither wholly related nor unrelated to the conservative/liberal pendulum of broader politics. Arguably, despite a conservative and nationalist moment in US politics, our criminal justice policy pendulum is again swinging in the due-process direction. This is evidenced in policy reforms and popular calls for policy reform such as monitoring the police, ending cash bail, legalizing marijuana, and so on. Contrary to prevailing trends, best-selling true crime books remain crime control oriented regardless of the historical/cultural era.KEYWORDS: Due processcrime controltrue crimecriminal justice policytough-on-crimecrime and popular culturecultural criminologypopular criminologymass mediabest sellers Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Truman Capote arguably invented a new style of storytelling he called the ‘non-fiction novel’. While this is disputed, it is undeniable that In Cold Blood was a best selling work that shaped true crime writing to come. See Ralph F Voss, Truman Capote and the Legacy of in Cold Blood (The University of Alabama Press 2011).2 See ibid.3 See Megan Boorsma, ‘The Whole Truth: The Implications of America’s True Crime Obsession’ (2017) 9 Elon Law Review 209.4 e.g. legally not-guilty v. factually innocent.5 ‘[H]omicides account for almost 80 percent of the total crimes recounted in the true crime books’. Alexis M Durham III, H Preston Elrod and Patrick T Kinkade, ‘Images of Crime and Justice: Murder and the “True Crime” Genre’ (1995) 23 Journal of Criminal Justice 143, 146.6 Jean Murley, The Rise of True Crime: 20th-Century Murder and American Popular Culture (Praeger Publishers 2008) 3.7 Diana Rickard, ‘Truth or Doubt: Questioning Legal Outcomes in True-Crime Documentaries’ (2022) 17 Law and Humanities 1, 3.8 Also called websleuths, armchair detectives, and cyber detectives.9 Elizabeth Yardley and others, ‘What’s the Deal with ‘Websleuthing’? News Media Representations of Amateur Detectives in Networked Spaces’ (2018) 14 Crime, Media, Culture 81.10 See Herbert Packer, The Limits of the Criminal Sanction (Stanford University Press 1968); Herbert Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (1964) 113 University of Pennsylania Law Review 1.11 Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ 12.12 ibid 5.13 ibid 13.14 ibid.15 Kent Roach, ‘Four Models of the Criminal Process’ (1998) 89 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 671.16 Roach (n 15) 692.17 It is beyond the scope of the work here but most crime is not reported, and most reported crime is never solved. This is one of the insights that makes Packer’s models unworkable as models of an actual system.18 Roach (n 15) 672.19 Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (n 10) 12.20 Robert Fitzgerald and Phoebe C Ellsworth, ‘Due Process vs. Crime Control: Death Qualification and Jury Attitudes’ (1984) 8 Law and Human Behavior 31.21 M Sandys and others, ‘Stacking the Deck for Guilt and Death: The Failure of Death Qualification to Ensure Impartiality’ in JR Acker, RM Bohm and CS Lanier (eds), America’s Experiment with Capital Punishment: Reflections on the Past, Present, and Future of the Ultimate Penal Sanction (3rd edn, Carolina Academic Press 2014).22 Richard Jones, ‘Populist Leniency, Crime Control and Due Process’ (2010) 14 Theoretical Criminology 331, 335.23 Laura Vitis and Vanessa Ryan, ‘True Crime Podcasts in Australia: Examining Listening Patterns and Listener Perceptions’ (2021) 30 Journal of Radio & Audio Media 1, 2.24 Lisa A Kort-Butler and Kelley J Sittner Hartshorn, ‘Watching the Detectives: Crime Programming, Fear of Crime, and Attitudes about the Criminal Justice System’ (2011) 52 The Sociological Quarterly 36, 48.25 Colleen M Ray and Lisa A Kort-Butler, ‘What you See is What you Get? Investigating How Survey Context Shapes the Association between Media Consumption and Attitudes about Crime’ (2020) 45 American Journal of Criminal Justice 914, 928.26 Susan Weiner, ‘True Crime: Fact, Fiction, and the Law’ (1993) 17 Legal Studies Forum 275, 287.27 Walter Lee Campbell, ‘From Tough-on-Crime to Smart-on-Crime: The Racial Impact of Policing Felony Drug Offenses in the 21st Century’ (PhD dissertation. Rutgers University-Graduate School-Newark 2019) 5–10.28 Sara M Walsh, ‘Safety Spheres: Danger Mapping and Spatial Justice’ (2015) 22 Race, Gender & Class 122, 123.29 Anita Biressi, ‘Death in the Good Old Days: True Crime Tales and Social History’ in Cultural Studies and the Working Class (Bloomsbury Publishing 2000) 180; Amanda M Vicary and R Chris Fraley, ‘Captured by True Crime: Why are Women Drawn to Tales of Rape, Murder, and Serial Killers?’ (2010) 1 Social Psychological and Personality Science 81, 82.30 Nicole Hahn Rafter, Shots in the Mirror: Crime Films and Society (2nd edn, Oxford University Press, USA 2006).31 Mark Seltzer, True Crime: Observations on Violence and Modernity (Routledge 2013), 37.32 Murley (n 6) 2, 6.33 ‘Each NIBRS offense belongs to one of three categories: Crimes Against Persons, Crimes Against Property, and Crimes Against Society. Crimes Against Persons (e.g. murder, rape, and assault), are those whose victims are always individuals. The object of Crimes Against Property (e.g. robbery, bribery, and burglary), is to obtain money, property, or some other benefit. Crimes Against Society (e.g. gambling, prostitution, and drug violations), represent society’s prohibition against engaging in certain types of activity; they are typically victimless crimes in which property is not the object.’ National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program, Crimes Against Persons, Property, and Society 2012).34 See Bergen Evans website: www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~immer/booksmain. His page ‘The Books of the Century’ contains, among other lists, the top ten bestsellers in nonfiction, by, year, as recorded by Publishers Weekly.35 Alice Payne Hackett and James Henry Burke, 80 Years of Best Sellers: 1895-1975 (New York: RR Bowker Company 1977), 198.36 David Stout, ‘Vincent T. Bugliosi, Manson Prosecutor and True-Crime Author, Dies at 80’ The New York Times (9 June 2015) <www.nytimes.com/2015/06/10/us/vincent-t-bugliosi-manson-prosecutor-and-true-crime-author-dies-at-80.html> accessed 7 December 2023.37 Keith L Justice, Bestseller Index: All Books, by Author, on the Lists of Publishers Weekly and the New York Times Through 1990 (McFarland 1998).38 Publishers Weekly, Top 25: Top 25 Best Sellers of the 1980s (Deseret News 1989).39 Christine Mai-Duc, ‘Ann Rule Dies at 83; True-Crime Writer Penned Account of Ted Bundy’ Los Angeles Times (27 July 2015) <www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-ann-rule-dies-20150727-story.html>.40 Simon & Schuster, ‘Ann Rule’ <www.simonandschuster.com/authors/Ann-Rule/1692136> accessed 7 December 2023.41 Daniel Immerwahr, ‘The Books of the Century: 1990–1999’ <www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~immer/books1990s> accessed 7 December 2023.42 Publishers Weekly, ‘Publishers Weekly Annual Adult Bestsellers 1990–2013’ <www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/74149-publishers-weekly-annual-adult-bestsellers-1990-2013.html> accessed 7 December 2023.43 The New York Times Book Review, ‘Paperback Nonfiction’ The New York Times (4 March 2018) <www.nytimes.com/books/best-sellers/2018/03/04/paperback-nonfiction/>.44 Witness by Amber Frey (January 23, January 30, 2005), Blood Brother by Anne Bird (March 20, March 27, 2005), A Deadly Game by Catherine Crier (April 3, 2005), The City of Falling Angels by John Berendt (October 16, October 23, 2005), For Laci by Sharon Rocha (January 29, February 5, 2006).45 The New York Times Book Review, ‘Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction’ The New York Times (29 April 2018) <www.nytimes.com/books/best-sellers/2018/04/29/combined-print-and-e-book-nonfiction/>.46 Seltzer (n 31) 35.47 Weiner, ‘True Crime: Fact, Fiction, and the Law’ (n 26) 284.48 Stella Bruzzi, ‘Making a Genre: The Case of the Contemporary True Crime Documentary’ (2016) 10 Law and Humanities 249, 251; Elizabeth Yardley, Emma Kelly and Shona Robinson-Edwards, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism? The Serialized True Crime Podcast as a Wake-Up Call in Times of Criminological Slumber’ (2019) 15 Crime, Media, Culture 503, 512.49 Voss (n 1) 147.50 Murley (n 6) 1.51 Brian Jarvis, ‘Monsters Inc.: Serial Killers and Consumer Culture’ (2007) 3 Crime, Media, Culture 326, 329.52 ‘The conventions of true crime’s forensic realism are immediately visible. That realism involves the sudden eruption of violence from beneath a therefore deceptively normal surface of things; that is, it involves the convention of penetrating beneath convention, beneath the clichés, of an everyday and statistical normality (a Wednesday, a school day, a neighborhood, a family). This is, more precisely, the stripping away of a fiction of normality-- the normal fiction: a normality that looks nothing but a self-exposing childhood fantasy of innocence, a Robin Hood story, a paradise lost’. Seltzer (n 31) 41–42.53 Rachel Franks writes that the detective came to replace God in true crime writing in the late 1800’s, that the detective ‘is uniquely equipped to identify, hunt down, and bring the abhorrent offender to justice … The detective is all-knowing and all-powerful against a world of corruption, crime, and sin but is also, like us, flawed and subject to failure’. Rachel Franks, ‘True Crime: The Regular Reinvention of a Genre’ (2016) 1 Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture 239–54.54 Murley (n 6) 1.55 ibid 82.56 Drew Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ in Nicole Rafter (ed), Shots in the Mirror (2nd edn, Oxford University Press 2006).57 See Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (n 10) 239. Though at the end of his life Packer thought that this due process revolution had failed. Roach (n 15).58 Truman Capote, In Cold Blood (Vintage International 1965).59 Hackett and Burke, 80 Years of Best Sellers: 1895-1975 (n 35).60 Voss (n 1).61 Capote (n 58) 11.62 By today’s standards. The courts ruled otherwise at the time in this case.63 Capote (n 58) 293.64 Andrew T Burt, ‘True Crime Does Pay: Narratives of Wrongdoing in Film and Literature’ (PhD dissertation. Northern Illinois University 2017).65 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 47.66 Vincent Bugliosi and Curt Gentry, Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders (W.W. Norton & Company 1994).67 He offers his respect to the methods and procedures of the younger, more educated police investigating one of the murders.68 Bugliosi and Gentry (n 66) 167.69 Albert W Alschuler, ‘Plea Bargaining and its History’ (1979) 79 Colombia Law Review 1.70 Jed S Rakoff, ‘Why Innocent People Plead Guilty’ The New York Review of Books <www.nybooks.com/articles/2014/11/20/why-innocent-people-plead-guilty> accessed 7 December 2023.71 There are a few exceptions, but this is beyond the scope here.72 Bugliosi and Gentry (n 66) 281.73 ibid 376.74 Timothy O Lenz, Changing Images of Law in Film & Television Crime Stories (Peter Lang Inc. 2003).75 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 49.76 ibid 20.77 See Lenz (n 74).78 Ann Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster 1980).79 Ann Rule is a female crime writer explicitly addressing a largely female audience, while the vast majority of known serial killers are men. Brian Jarvis writes that ‘from a feminist perspective it could be argued that serial killing is not so much a radical departure from normal codes of civilized behavior as it is an intensification of hegemonic masculine ideals … The serial killer is driven by the desire to achieve mastery, virility and control: his objective is to dominate and possess the body and the mind of his victims’. If we know anything about violence against women, it is that it is prevalent and largely private. In this way, violence lurking under a normal facade is part of women’s everyday and collective lives. It is no surprise that true crime writing, and Ann Rule in particular, is read by more women than men. Indeed, it is in Ann Rule’s writing that we see Ted Bundy as not just a man but ‘men’ – women are both sexually attracted to Bundy and drawn to his pleas for help, which puts the women’s lives in danger. Laura Browder found that many women revealed that they read true crime to help them deal with violence in their past and manage current fears. Laura Browder, ‘Dystopian Romance: True Crime and the Female Reader’ (2006) 39 The Journal of Popular Culture 928; Jarvis, (n 51) 333.80 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) xvii.81 Policing is generally reactive in nature. That is, police enter the scene after the crime has been committed.82 Ironically, Ted Bundy seems to be a big fan of law-and-order politics. Rule tells us about his participation in Republican politics, and his deep dislike of anarchy and the general mayhem of student protests on college campuses. Had he succeeded in his Republican political ambitions of the time he likely would have been a ‘law and order’, ‘tough on crime’, conservative candidate running on a crime control platform.83 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) 130.84 He escapes during a law library visit and is aided by an area map he obtained during discovery while acting as his own attorney.85 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) 245.86 See Thomas G Blomberg and Stanley Cohen, Punishment and Social Control (2nd edn, Aldine de Gruyter 2003).87 Blomberg and Cohen (n 86).88 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 53.89 Rafter (n 30) 78.90 John Berendt, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (Vintage Books 1994).91 Voss (n 1) 49.92 If you consider being tried four times ‘getting away’ with something. The author seemingly sides with yes.93 2 guilty verdicts, 1 mistrial, 1 not guilty.94 Berendt (n 90) 237.95 The author is a New Yorker and there is a distinct tone here that racism and classism are Southern issues.96 David Dagan and Steven M Teles, ‘Locked in? Conservative Reform and the Future of Mass Incarceration’ (2014) 651 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 266.97 Katherine Beckett, Anna Reosti and Emily Knaphus, ‘The End of an Era? Understanding the Contradictions of Criminal Justice Reform’ (2016) 664 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 238.98 DPIC Death Penalty Information Center, ‘State by State’ (2019) <https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/state-and-federal-info/state-by-state> accessed 7 July 2019.99 Erik Larson, Devil in the White City (Vintage Books 2003).100 Michelle McNamara, I’ll Be Gone in the Dark (HarperCollins 2018).101 Larson (n 99) 395.102 ibid 85.103 John Gramlich, ‘What the Data Says About Gun Deaths in the U.S.’ (Pew Research Center, 2023) <www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/04/26/what-the-data-says-about-gun-deaths-in-the-u-s/> accessed 20 July 2023.104 NPD, ‘“Fifty Shades of Grey” Was the Best-Selling Book of the Decade in the U.S., The NPD Group Says’ 2019) <www.npd.com/news/press-releases/2019/fifty-shades-of-grey-was-the-best-selling-book-of-the-decade-in-the-u-s-the-npd-group-says/> accessed 20 July 2023.105 Yardley and others, ‘What’s the Deal with ‘Websleuthing’?’ (n 9).106 Rachel Monroe, Savage Appetites: True Stories of Women, Crime, and Obsession (Scribner 2020) 56.107 McNamara (n 100) 83.108 ibid 237.109 ibid 105.110 It is eventually submitted and used to capture the killer, but this is after publication and the author’s death.111 McNamara (n 100) 303.112 See ibid 102.113 ibid 271.114 Yardley and others, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 505.115 Rickard (n 7) 3.116 John Grisham, The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town (Dell 2012).117 Brian Stevenson, Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption (Random House Publishing Group 2014).118 See Lili Pâquet, ‘Literary Forensic Rhetoric: Maps, Emotional Assent, and Rhetorical Space in Serial and Making a Murderer’ (2018) 12 Law and Humanities 71.119 Karen Halttunen, Murder Most Foul: The Killer and the American Gothic Imagination (Harvard University Press 1998) 36.120 Halttunen (n 119) 78–79.121 Alexandra Thompson and Susannah N Tapp, Criminal Victimization, 2021 (U.S. Department of Justice- Office of Justice Programs 2023).122 Monroe (106) 1.123 Franks (n 53) 251.124 Murley (n 6) 3.125 Yardley, Kelly and Robinson-Edwards, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 504.126 Richard Berry, ‘A Golden Age of Podcasting – Evaluating Serial in the Context of Podcast Histories Symposium – Podcasting: A Decade in the Life of a New Audio Medium’ (2015) 22 Journal of Radio & Audio Media 170, 174.127 Elisa Shearer and others, ‘Podcast Use Among Different Age Groups’ (Pew Research Center, 2023) <www.pewresearch.org/journalism/2023/04/18/podcast-use-among-different-age-groups/> accessed 12 July 2023.128 Yolander G Hurst and James Frank, ‘How Kids View Cops: The Nature of Juvenile Attitudes Toward the Police’ (2000) 28 Journal of Criminal Justice 189.129 Spotify, ‘About Spotify’ <https://investors.spotify.com/about/> accessed 17 July 2023.130 Daniel Ruby, ‘Spotify Stats 2023 — Subscribers, Revenue & Other Insights’ (2023) <www.demandsage.com/spotify-stats/> accessed 17 July 2023.131 Scott Swan, ‘“Queen of True Crime” Expands Podcasting Business in Indianapolis’ WTHR 13 (2 November 2022) <www.wthr.com/article/news/local/crime-junkie-podcast-ashley-flowers-indianapolis-business/531-01c72a63-24f3-42d0-98e9-db8d72b88439>.132 See Monroe (n 106) 6–7.133 Yardley and others, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 509.134 Danielle C Slakoff, ‘The Representation of Women and Girls of Color in United States Crime News’ Sociology Compass 2.135 Vitis and Ryan (n 23) 16.136 See Rickard (n 7).","PeriodicalId":42313,"journal":{"name":"Law and Humanities","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The crime control of true crime best sellers\",\"authors\":\"Sara M. Walsh\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/17521483.2023.2263240\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTIn criminology, social and legal eras are often referred to as dominated by either due process or crime control narratives. In general, crime control narratives focus on the need for tough-on-crime policies and on the terror of criminals wreaking havoc in society. By contrast, due process narratives focus on the need to move slowly and methodically through our justice process to avoid mistakes and violations of human rights. These eras swing back and forth, neither wholly related nor unrelated to the conservative/liberal pendulum of broader politics. Arguably, despite a conservative and nationalist moment in US politics, our criminal justice policy pendulum is again swinging in the due-process direction. This is evidenced in policy reforms and popular calls for policy reform such as monitoring the police, ending cash bail, legalizing marijuana, and so on. Contrary to prevailing trends, best-selling true crime books remain crime control oriented regardless of the historical/cultural era.KEYWORDS: Due processcrime controltrue crimecriminal justice policytough-on-crimecrime and popular culturecultural criminologypopular criminologymass mediabest sellers Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Truman Capote arguably invented a new style of storytelling he called the ‘non-fiction novel’. While this is disputed, it is undeniable that In Cold Blood was a best selling work that shaped true crime writing to come. See Ralph F Voss, Truman Capote and the Legacy of in Cold Blood (The University of Alabama Press 2011).2 See ibid.3 See Megan Boorsma, ‘The Whole Truth: The Implications of America’s True Crime Obsession’ (2017) 9 Elon Law Review 209.4 e.g. legally not-guilty v. factually innocent.5 ‘[H]omicides account for almost 80 percent of the total crimes recounted in the true crime books’. Alexis M Durham III, H Preston Elrod and Patrick T Kinkade, ‘Images of Crime and Justice: Murder and the “True Crime” Genre’ (1995) 23 Journal of Criminal Justice 143, 146.6 Jean Murley, The Rise of True Crime: 20th-Century Murder and American Popular Culture (Praeger Publishers 2008) 3.7 Diana Rickard, ‘Truth or Doubt: Questioning Legal Outcomes in True-Crime Documentaries’ (2022) 17 Law and Humanities 1, 3.8 Also called websleuths, armchair detectives, and cyber detectives.9 Elizabeth Yardley and others, ‘What’s the Deal with ‘Websleuthing’? News Media Representations of Amateur Detectives in Networked Spaces’ (2018) 14 Crime, Media, Culture 81.10 See Herbert Packer, The Limits of the Criminal Sanction (Stanford University Press 1968); Herbert Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (1964) 113 University of Pennsylania Law Review 1.11 Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ 12.12 ibid 5.13 ibid 13.14 ibid.15 Kent Roach, ‘Four Models of the Criminal Process’ (1998) 89 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 671.16 Roach (n 15) 692.17 It is beyond the scope of the work here but most crime is not reported, and most reported crime is never solved. This is one of the insights that makes Packer’s models unworkable as models of an actual system.18 Roach (n 15) 672.19 Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (n 10) 12.20 Robert Fitzgerald and Phoebe C Ellsworth, ‘Due Process vs. Crime Control: Death Qualification and Jury Attitudes’ (1984) 8 Law and Human Behavior 31.21 M Sandys and others, ‘Stacking the Deck for Guilt and Death: The Failure of Death Qualification to Ensure Impartiality’ in JR Acker, RM Bohm and CS Lanier (eds), America’s Experiment with Capital Punishment: Reflections on the Past, Present, and Future of the Ultimate Penal Sanction (3rd edn, Carolina Academic Press 2014).22 Richard Jones, ‘Populist Leniency, Crime Control and Due Process’ (2010) 14 Theoretical Criminology 331, 335.23 Laura Vitis and Vanessa Ryan, ‘True Crime Podcasts in Australia: Examining Listening Patterns and Listener Perceptions’ (2021) 30 Journal of Radio & Audio Media 1, 2.24 Lisa A Kort-Butler and Kelley J Sittner Hartshorn, ‘Watching the Detectives: Crime Programming, Fear of Crime, and Attitudes about the Criminal Justice System’ (2011) 52 The Sociological Quarterly 36, 48.25 Colleen M Ray and Lisa A Kort-Butler, ‘What you See is What you Get? Investigating How Survey Context Shapes the Association between Media Consumption and Attitudes about Crime’ (2020) 45 American Journal of Criminal Justice 914, 928.26 Susan Weiner, ‘True Crime: Fact, Fiction, and the Law’ (1993) 17 Legal Studies Forum 275, 287.27 Walter Lee Campbell, ‘From Tough-on-Crime to Smart-on-Crime: The Racial Impact of Policing Felony Drug Offenses in the 21st Century’ (PhD dissertation. Rutgers University-Graduate School-Newark 2019) 5–10.28 Sara M Walsh, ‘Safety Spheres: Danger Mapping and Spatial Justice’ (2015) 22 Race, Gender & Class 122, 123.29 Anita Biressi, ‘Death in the Good Old Days: True Crime Tales and Social History’ in Cultural Studies and the Working Class (Bloomsbury Publishing 2000) 180; Amanda M Vicary and R Chris Fraley, ‘Captured by True Crime: Why are Women Drawn to Tales of Rape, Murder, and Serial Killers?’ (2010) 1 Social Psychological and Personality Science 81, 82.30 Nicole Hahn Rafter, Shots in the Mirror: Crime Films and Society (2nd edn, Oxford University Press, USA 2006).31 Mark Seltzer, True Crime: Observations on Violence and Modernity (Routledge 2013), 37.32 Murley (n 6) 2, 6.33 ‘Each NIBRS offense belongs to one of three categories: Crimes Against Persons, Crimes Against Property, and Crimes Against Society. Crimes Against Persons (e.g. murder, rape, and assault), are those whose victims are always individuals. The object of Crimes Against Property (e.g. robbery, bribery, and burglary), is to obtain money, property, or some other benefit. Crimes Against Society (e.g. gambling, prostitution, and drug violations), represent society’s prohibition against engaging in certain types of activity; they are typically victimless crimes in which property is not the object.’ National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program, Crimes Against Persons, Property, and Society 2012).34 See Bergen Evans website: www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~immer/booksmain. His page ‘The Books of the Century’ contains, among other lists, the top ten bestsellers in nonfiction, by, year, as recorded by Publishers Weekly.35 Alice Payne Hackett and James Henry Burke, 80 Years of Best Sellers: 1895-1975 (New York: RR Bowker Company 1977), 198.36 David Stout, ‘Vincent T. Bugliosi, Manson Prosecutor and True-Crime Author, Dies at 80’ The New York Times (9 June 2015) <www.nytimes.com/2015/06/10/us/vincent-t-bugliosi-manson-prosecutor-and-true-crime-author-dies-at-80.html> accessed 7 December 2023.37 Keith L Justice, Bestseller Index: All Books, by Author, on the Lists of Publishers Weekly and the New York Times Through 1990 (McFarland 1998).38 Publishers Weekly, Top 25: Top 25 Best Sellers of the 1980s (Deseret News 1989).39 Christine Mai-Duc, ‘Ann Rule Dies at 83; True-Crime Writer Penned Account of Ted Bundy’ Los Angeles Times (27 July 2015) <www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-ann-rule-dies-20150727-story.html>.40 Simon & Schuster, ‘Ann Rule’ <www.simonandschuster.com/authors/Ann-Rule/1692136> accessed 7 December 2023.41 Daniel Immerwahr, ‘The Books of the Century: 1990–1999’ <www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~immer/books1990s> accessed 7 December 2023.42 Publishers Weekly, ‘Publishers Weekly Annual Adult Bestsellers 1990–2013’ <www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/74149-publishers-weekly-annual-adult-bestsellers-1990-2013.html> accessed 7 December 2023.43 The New York Times Book Review, ‘Paperback Nonfiction’ The New York Times (4 March 2018) <www.nytimes.com/books/best-sellers/2018/03/04/paperback-nonfiction/>.44 Witness by Amber Frey (January 23, January 30, 2005), Blood Brother by Anne Bird (March 20, March 27, 2005), A Deadly Game by Catherine Crier (April 3, 2005), The City of Falling Angels by John Berendt (October 16, October 23, 2005), For Laci by Sharon Rocha (January 29, February 5, 2006).45 The New York Times Book Review, ‘Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction’ The New York Times (29 April 2018) <www.nytimes.com/books/best-sellers/2018/04/29/combined-print-and-e-book-nonfiction/>.46 Seltzer (n 31) 35.47 Weiner, ‘True Crime: Fact, Fiction, and the Law’ (n 26) 284.48 Stella Bruzzi, ‘Making a Genre: The Case of the Contemporary True Crime Documentary’ (2016) 10 Law and Humanities 249, 251; Elizabeth Yardley, Emma Kelly and Shona Robinson-Edwards, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism? The Serialized True Crime Podcast as a Wake-Up Call in Times of Criminological Slumber’ (2019) 15 Crime, Media, Culture 503, 512.49 Voss (n 1) 147.50 Murley (n 6) 1.51 Brian Jarvis, ‘Monsters Inc.: Serial Killers and Consumer Culture’ (2007) 3 Crime, Media, Culture 326, 329.52 ‘The conventions of true crime’s forensic realism are immediately visible. That realism involves the sudden eruption of violence from beneath a therefore deceptively normal surface of things; that is, it involves the convention of penetrating beneath convention, beneath the clichés, of an everyday and statistical normality (a Wednesday, a school day, a neighborhood, a family). This is, more precisely, the stripping away of a fiction of normality-- the normal fiction: a normality that looks nothing but a self-exposing childhood fantasy of innocence, a Robin Hood story, a paradise lost’. Seltzer (n 31) 41–42.53 Rachel Franks writes that the detective came to replace God in true crime writing in the late 1800’s, that the detective ‘is uniquely equipped to identify, hunt down, and bring the abhorrent offender to justice … The detective is all-knowing and all-powerful against a world of corruption, crime, and sin but is also, like us, flawed and subject to failure’. Rachel Franks, ‘True Crime: The Regular Reinvention of a Genre’ (2016) 1 Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture 239–54.54 Murley (n 6) 1.55 ibid 82.56 Drew Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ in Nicole Rafter (ed), Shots in the Mirror (2nd edn, Oxford University Press 2006).57 See Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (n 10) 239. Though at the end of his life Packer thought that this due process revolution had failed. Roach (n 15).58 Truman Capote, In Cold Blood (Vintage International 1965).59 Hackett and Burke, 80 Years of Best Sellers: 1895-1975 (n 35).60 Voss (n 1).61 Capote (n 58) 11.62 By today’s standards. The courts ruled otherwise at the time in this case.63 Capote (n 58) 293.64 Andrew T Burt, ‘True Crime Does Pay: Narratives of Wrongdoing in Film and Literature’ (PhD dissertation. Northern Illinois University 2017).65 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 47.66 Vincent Bugliosi and Curt Gentry, Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders (W.W. Norton & Company 1994).67 He offers his respect to the methods and procedures of the younger, more educated police investigating one of the murders.68 Bugliosi and Gentry (n 66) 167.69 Albert W Alschuler, ‘Plea Bargaining and its History’ (1979) 79 Colombia Law Review 1.70 Jed S Rakoff, ‘Why Innocent People Plead Guilty’ The New York Review of Books <www.nybooks.com/articles/2014/11/20/why-innocent-people-plead-guilty> accessed 7 December 2023.71 There are a few exceptions, but this is beyond the scope here.72 Bugliosi and Gentry (n 66) 281.73 ibid 376.74 Timothy O Lenz, Changing Images of Law in Film & Television Crime Stories (Peter Lang Inc. 2003).75 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 49.76 ibid 20.77 See Lenz (n 74).78 Ann Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster 1980).79 Ann Rule is a female crime writer explicitly addressing a largely female audience, while the vast majority of known serial killers are men. Brian Jarvis writes that ‘from a feminist perspective it could be argued that serial killing is not so much a radical departure from normal codes of civilized behavior as it is an intensification of hegemonic masculine ideals … The serial killer is driven by the desire to achieve mastery, virility and control: his objective is to dominate and possess the body and the mind of his victims’. If we know anything about violence against women, it is that it is prevalent and largely private. In this way, violence lurking under a normal facade is part of women’s everyday and collective lives. It is no surprise that true crime writing, and Ann Rule in particular, is read by more women than men. Indeed, it is in Ann Rule’s writing that we see Ted Bundy as not just a man but ‘men’ – women are both sexually attracted to Bundy and drawn to his pleas for help, which puts the women’s lives in danger. Laura Browder found that many women revealed that they read true crime to help them deal with violence in their past and manage current fears. Laura Browder, ‘Dystopian Romance: True Crime and the Female Reader’ (2006) 39 The Journal of Popular Culture 928; Jarvis, (n 51) 333.80 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) xvii.81 Policing is generally reactive in nature. That is, police enter the scene after the crime has been committed.82 Ironically, Ted Bundy seems to be a big fan of law-and-order politics. Rule tells us about his participation in Republican politics, and his deep dislike of anarchy and the general mayhem of student protests on college campuses. Had he succeeded in his Republican political ambitions of the time he likely would have been a ‘law and order’, ‘tough on crime’, conservative candidate running on a crime control platform.83 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) 130.84 He escapes during a law library visit and is aided by an area map he obtained during discovery while acting as his own attorney.85 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) 245.86 See Thomas G Blomberg and Stanley Cohen, Punishment and Social Control (2nd edn, Aldine de Gruyter 2003).87 Blomberg and Cohen (n 86).88 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 53.89 Rafter (n 30) 78.90 John Berendt, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (Vintage Books 1994).91 Voss (n 1) 49.92 If you consider being tried four times ‘getting away’ with something. The author seemingly sides with yes.93 2 guilty verdicts, 1 mistrial, 1 not guilty.94 Berendt (n 90) 237.95 The author is a New Yorker and there is a distinct tone here that racism and classism are Southern issues.96 David Dagan and Steven M Teles, ‘Locked in? Conservative Reform and the Future of Mass Incarceration’ (2014) 651 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 266.97 Katherine Beckett, Anna Reosti and Emily Knaphus, ‘The End of an Era? Understanding the Contradictions of Criminal Justice Reform’ (2016) 664 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 238.98 DPIC Death Penalty Information Center, ‘State by State’ (2019) <https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/state-and-federal-info/state-by-state> accessed 7 July 2019.99 Erik Larson, Devil in the White City (Vintage Books 2003).100 Michelle McNamara, I’ll Be Gone in the Dark (HarperCollins 2018).101 Larson (n 99) 395.102 ibid 85.103 John Gramlich, ‘What the Data Says About Gun Deaths in the U.S.’ (Pew Research Center, 2023) <www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/04/26/what-the-data-says-about-gun-deaths-in-the-u-s/> accessed 20 July 2023.104 NPD, ‘“Fifty Shades of Grey” Was the Best-Selling Book of the Decade in the U.S., The NPD Group Says’ 2019) <www.npd.com/news/press-releases/2019/fifty-shades-of-grey-was-the-best-selling-book-of-the-decade-in-the-u-s-the-npd-group-says/> accessed 20 July 2023.105 Yardley and others, ‘What’s the Deal with ‘Websleuthing’?’ (n 9).106 Rachel Monroe, Savage Appetites: True Stories of Women, Crime, and Obsession (Scribner 2020) 56.107 McNamara (n 100) 83.108 ibid 237.109 ibid 105.110 It is eventually submitted and used to capture the killer, but this is after publication and the author’s death.111 McNamara (n 100) 303.112 See ibid 102.113 ibid 271.114 Yardley and others, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 505.115 Rickard (n 7) 3.116 John Grisham, The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town (Dell 2012).117 Brian Stevenson, Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption (Random House Publishing Group 2014).118 See Lili Pâquet, ‘Literary Forensic Rhetoric: Maps, Emotional Assent, and Rhetorical Space in Serial and Making a Murderer’ (2018) 12 Law and Humanities 71.119 Karen Halttunen, Murder Most Foul: The Killer and the American Gothic Imagination (Harvard University Press 1998) 36.120 Halttunen (n 119) 78–79.121 Alexandra Thompson and Susannah N Tapp, Criminal Victimization, 2021 (U.S. Department of Justice- Office of Justice Programs 2023).122 Monroe (106) 1.123 Franks (n 53) 251.124 Murley (n 6) 3.125 Yardley, Kelly and Robinson-Edwards, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 504.126 Richard Berry, ‘A Golden Age of Podcasting – Evaluating Serial in the Context of Podcast Histories Symposium – Podcasting: A Decade in the Life of a New Audio Medium’ (2015) 22 Journal of Radio & Audio Media 170, 174.127 Elisa Shearer and others, ‘Podcast Use Among Different Age Groups’ (Pew Research Center, 2023) <www.pewresearch.org/journalism/2023/04/18/podcast-use-among-different-age-groups/> accessed 12 July 2023.128 Yolander G Hurst and James Frank, ‘How Kids View Cops: The Nature of Juvenile Attitudes Toward the Police’ (2000) 28 Journal of Criminal Justice 189.129 Spotify, ‘About Spotify’ <https://investors.spotify.com/about/> accessed 17 July 2023.130 Daniel Ruby, ‘Spotify Stats 2023 — Subscribers, Revenue & Other Insights’ (2023) <www.demandsage.com/spotify-stats/> accessed 17 July 2023.131 Scott Swan, ‘“Queen of True Crime” Expands Podcasting Business in Indianapolis’ WTHR 13 (2 November 2022) <www.wthr.com/article/news/local/crime-junkie-podcast-ashley-flowers-indianapolis-business/531-01c72a63-24f3-42d0-98e9-db8d72b88439>.132 See Monroe (n 106) 6–7.133 Yardley and others, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 509.134 Danielle C Slakoff, ‘The Representation of Women and Girls of Color in United States Crime News’ Sociology Compass 2.135 Vitis and Ryan (n 23) 16.136 See Rickard (n 7).\",\"PeriodicalId\":42313,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Law and Humanities\",\"volume\":\"1 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.3000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-09-26\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Law and Humanities\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/17521483.2023.2263240\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"LAW\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Law and Humanities","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/17521483.2023.2263240","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"LAW","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
在犯罪学中,社会和法律时代通常被认为是由正当程序或犯罪控制叙事主导的。一般来说,犯罪控制叙事的重点是对犯罪采取严厉政策的必要性,以及对犯罪分子在社会上造成严重破坏的恐惧。相比之下,正当程序的叙述侧重于需要缓慢而有条理地通过我们的司法程序来避免错误和侵犯人权。这些时代来回摇摆,与更广泛政治的保守/自由钟摆既不完全相关,也不完全无关。可以说,尽管美国政治出现了保守主义和民族主义的时刻,但我们的刑事司法政策钟摆再次向正当程序的方向摆动。这在政策改革和公众对政策改革的呼声中得到了证明,比如监督警察、结束现金保释、大麻合法化等等。与流行的趋势相反,畅销的真实犯罪书籍仍然以犯罪控制为导向,而不考虑历史/文化时代。关键词:正当程序犯罪控制真实犯罪刑事司法政策严厉打击犯罪与流行文化犯罪学流行犯罪学大众媒体最畅销者披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突。注1杜鲁门·卡波特可以说发明了一种新的叙事方式,他称之为“非虚构小说”。尽管这一点存在争议,但不可否认的是,《冷血》是一部影响了后来真正的犯罪小说的畅销书。参见Ralph F Voss, Truman Capote和在冷血中的遗产(阿拉巴马大学出版社2011)参见Megan Boorsma,《全部真相:美国对真实犯罪的痴迷》(2017)9《伊隆法律评论》第209.4期,如法律上无罪与事实上无罪。“在真实的犯罪书籍中,谋杀几乎占了全部犯罪的80%。”Alexis M Durham III, H Preston Elrod和Patrick T Kinkade,“犯罪和正义的图像:谋杀和“真实犯罪”类型”(1995)23刑事司法杂志143,146.6 Jean Murley,真实犯罪的兴起:20世纪的谋杀和美国流行文化(Praeger出版社2008)3.7 Diana Rickard,“真相或怀疑:质疑真实犯罪纪录片中的法律结果”(2022)17法律和人文1,3.8也被称为网络侦探,armchair侦探和网络侦探伊丽莎白·亚德利(Elizabeth Yardley)等人的《网络侦探是怎么回事?》网络空间中业余侦探的新闻媒体表现(2018)14犯罪,媒体,文化81.10见赫伯特·帕克,刑事制裁的限制(斯坦福大学出版社1968);赫伯特·帕克,“刑事过程的两种模式”(1964)113宾夕法尼亚大学法律评论1.11帕克,“刑事过程的两种模式”12.12同上5.13同上13.14同上15肯特·罗奇,“刑事过程的四种模式”(1998)89刑法和犯罪学杂志671.16罗奇(n 15) 692.17这超出了这里的工作范围,但大多数犯罪没有被报道,大多数报道的犯罪从未得到解决。这是使Packer的模型作为一个实际系统的模型不可行的见解之一罗奇(第15期)672.19帕克,“刑事程序的两种模式”(第10期)12.20罗伯特·菲茨杰拉德和菲比·C·埃尔斯沃思,“正当程序与犯罪控制:死亡资格和陪审团态度”(1984年)8法律和人类行为31.21 M·桑蒂斯和其他人,“为有罪和死亡堆积甲板:死亡资格的失败以确保公正性”在JR Acker, RM Bohm和CS拉尼尔(编辑),美国的死刑实验:《终极刑罚制裁的过去、现在和未来思考》(第3版,卡罗莱纳学术出版社,2014年)Richard Jones,“民粹主义宽大,犯罪控制和正当程序”(2010)14理论犯罪学331,335.23 Laura Vitis和Vanessa Ryan,“澳大利亚的真实犯罪播客:检查收听模式和听众感知”(2021)30广播和音频媒体杂志1,2.24 Lisa A Kort-Butler和Kelley J Sittner Hartshorn,“观看侦探:犯罪规划,对犯罪的恐惧,以及对刑事司法系统的态度”(2011)52社会学季刊36,48.25 Colleen M Ray和Lisa A Kort-Butler,“你所看到的就是你所得到的?调查调查背景如何塑造媒体消费与犯罪态度之间的联系”(2020)45美国刑事司法杂志914,928.26苏珊·韦纳,“真正的犯罪:事实,虚构和法律”(1993)17法律研究论坛275,287.27沃尔特·李·坎贝尔,“从严厉犯罪到聪明犯罪:21世纪治安重罪毒品犯罪的种族影响”(博士论文)。萨拉·M·沃尔什,“安全领域:危险映射和空间正义”(2015)22种族,性别和阶级122,123。 [59]哈克特和伯克:《畅销书80年:1895-1975》(第35期)[1] [m]卡波特(生于58年)11.62按照今天的标准。法院当时在这个案件中作出了不同的裁决卡波特(n 58) 293.64安德鲁T伯特,“真正的犯罪有报酬:电影和文学中的不法行为的叙述”(博士论文)。北伊利诺伊大学2017).65托德,《犯罪电影的历史》(第56期)47.66文森特·布格里奥西和柯特·金特里,《乱来:曼森谋杀案的真实故事》(W.W.诺顿公司1994年版)67他对那些更年轻、受过更多教育的警察调查其中一起谋杀案的方法和程序表示尊重Bugliosi和Gentry(1966年)167.69 Albert W . Alschuler,“辩诉交易及其历史”(1979年)79哥伦比亚法律评论1.70 Jed S . Rakoff,“为什么无辜的人认罪”纽约书评2023.12月7日访问71有一些例外,但这超出了这里的范围《在影视犯罪故事中法律形象的变化》(Peter Lang Inc. 2003).75托德,《犯罪电影的历史》(第56期)49.76,同上20.77见Lenz(第74期).78安·鲁尔,《我身旁的陌生人》(画廊图书/西蒙与舒斯特出版社,1980),第79页安·鲁尔(Ann Rule)是一位女性犯罪作家,她的读者主要是女性,而大多数已知的连环杀手都是男性。布莱恩·贾维斯写道:“从女权主义的角度来看,连环杀人与其说是对正常文明行为准则的彻底背离,不如说是对男性霸权理想的强化……连环杀手的动机是获得掌控、男子气概和控制的欲望:他的目标是支配和占有受害者的身体和思想。”如果说我们对针对妇女的暴力有什么了解的话,那就是它很普遍,而且很大程度上是私下发生的。通过这种方式,隐藏在正常表象下的暴力成为妇女日常和集体生活的一部分。毫不奇怪,真正的犯罪小说,尤其是安·鲁尔的作品,女性读者多于男性读者。的确,正是在安·鲁尔的作品中,我们看到泰德·邦迪不仅是一个男人,而且是“男人”——女人既被邦迪性吸引,又被他的求助所吸引,这让女人的生命处于危险之中。劳拉·布劳德发现,许多女性透露,她们阅读真实的犯罪故事,是为了帮助她们处理过去的暴力事件,管理现在的恐惧。劳拉·布劳德,《反乌托邦的浪漫:真实的犯罪与女性读者》(2006),《大众文化杂志》928期;贾维斯,(n 51) 333.80规则,我身边的陌生人(n 78) xviii .81警务工作本质上通常是反应性的。也就是说,警察在犯罪发生后才进入现场讽刺的是,泰德·邦迪似乎是法律与秩序政治的忠实粉丝。鲁尔向我们讲述了他对共和党政治的参与,以及他对无政府状态和大学校园里学生抗议活动的普遍混乱的极度厌恶。如果当时他成功实现了共和党的政治抱负,他可能会成为一个“法律与秩序”、“严厉打击犯罪”、以控制犯罪为竞选纲领的保守派候选人规则,我身边的陌生人(n . 78)他在一次法律图书馆的访问中逃跑了,并得到了他作为自己的律师在发现过程中获得的一张地区地图的帮助《我身旁的陌生人》(第78期)245.86见托马斯·G·布隆伯格和斯坦利·科恩:《惩罚与社会控制》(第二版,奥尔丁·德·格鲁伊特2003年版)布隆伯格和科恩(1986年)。88托德,《犯罪电影的历史》(第56期)53.89瑞特(第30期)78.90约翰·贝伦特,《善恶花园的午夜》(古着图书1994).91Voss (n . 1) 49.92如果你认为被试了四次就“逃脱”了。作者似乎站在“是”的一边。2项有罪判决,1项无效审判,1项无罪作者是纽约人,这里有一种明显的语气,种族主义和阶级主义是南方的问题大卫·达根和史蒂文·M·泰勒斯,《被锁住了?》《保守改革与大规模监禁的未来》(2014)651《美国政治与社会科学学院年鉴》266.97凯瑟琳·贝克特、安娜·瑞奥斯蒂和艾米丽·克纳福斯:《一个时代的终结?《理解刑事司法改革的矛盾》(2016)664《美国政治社会科学院年鉴》238.98 DPIC死刑信息中心,“各州”(2019)2019.7月7日访问米歇尔·麦克纳马拉《我将消失在黑暗中》(HarperCollins 2018)Larson (n 99) 395.102同上85.103 John Gramlich,“美国枪支死亡的数据说明”(皮尤研究中心,2023年)查阅了2023年7月20日NPD,“《五十度灰》是美国十年来最畅销的书,NPD集团说”2019)查阅了2023年7月20日Yardley等人,“网络侦探”是怎么回事?(n . 9)。 106蕾切尔·门罗,《野蛮的欲望:关于女人、犯罪和痴迷的真实故事》(斯克里布纳2020年版)56.107麦克纳马拉(n 100) 83.108同上237.109同上105.110它最终被提交并用于抓捕凶手,但这是在出版和作者去世之后麦克纳马拉(n 100) 303.112参见同上102.113同上271.114亚德利等人,“永远困在晚期资本主义的想象中?约翰·格里沙姆:《无辜者:小镇上的谋杀与不公》(戴尔出版社2012年版),第117页布莱恩·史蒂文森,《公正的仁慈:一个正义与救赎的故事》(兰登书屋出版集团2014),第118页见Lili p<e:2> quet,“文学法医修辞:地图,情感同意,以及连环和制造杀人犯的修辞空间”(2018)12法律与人文71.119凯伦·哈尔顿宁,最邪恶的谋杀:杀手和美国哥特式的想象(哈佛大学出版社1998)36.120哈尔顿宁(第119号)78-79.121亚历山德拉·汤普森和苏珊娜·n·塔普,刑事受害者,2021(美国司法部-司法项目办公室2023)。122门罗(106)弗兰克斯(53)默里(6)亚德利、凯利和罗宾逊-爱德华兹,“永远困在晚期资本主义的想象中?”(n 48) 504.126理查德·贝瑞,“播客的黄金时代-在播客历史的背景下评估系列研讨会-播客:新音频媒体生命中的十年”(2015)22广播和音频媒体杂志170,174.127 Elisa Shearer等人,“不同年龄组的播客使用”(皮尤研究中心,2023)访问2023.7月12日。青少年对警察态度的本质”(2000)28刑事司法杂志189.129 Spotify,“关于Spotify”访问2023.7月17日130丹尼尔鲁比,“Spotify统计2023 -订户,收入和其他见解”(2023)访问2023.7月17日131斯科特斯旺,“真实犯罪女王”在印第安纳波利斯扩大播客业务”WTHR 13(2022年11月2日)。132见门罗(n 106) 6-7.133 Yardley和其他人,“永远陷入晚期资本主义的想象中?(n 48) 509.134 Danielle C Slakoff,“美国犯罪新闻中有色人种妇女和女孩的代表性”社会学指南2.135 Vitis和Ryan (n 23) 16.136参见Rickard (n 7)。
ABSTRACTIn criminology, social and legal eras are often referred to as dominated by either due process or crime control narratives. In general, crime control narratives focus on the need for tough-on-crime policies and on the terror of criminals wreaking havoc in society. By contrast, due process narratives focus on the need to move slowly and methodically through our justice process to avoid mistakes and violations of human rights. These eras swing back and forth, neither wholly related nor unrelated to the conservative/liberal pendulum of broader politics. Arguably, despite a conservative and nationalist moment in US politics, our criminal justice policy pendulum is again swinging in the due-process direction. This is evidenced in policy reforms and popular calls for policy reform such as monitoring the police, ending cash bail, legalizing marijuana, and so on. Contrary to prevailing trends, best-selling true crime books remain crime control oriented regardless of the historical/cultural era.KEYWORDS: Due processcrime controltrue crimecriminal justice policytough-on-crimecrime and popular culturecultural criminologypopular criminologymass mediabest sellers Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Truman Capote arguably invented a new style of storytelling he called the ‘non-fiction novel’. While this is disputed, it is undeniable that In Cold Blood was a best selling work that shaped true crime writing to come. See Ralph F Voss, Truman Capote and the Legacy of in Cold Blood (The University of Alabama Press 2011).2 See ibid.3 See Megan Boorsma, ‘The Whole Truth: The Implications of America’s True Crime Obsession’ (2017) 9 Elon Law Review 209.4 e.g. legally not-guilty v. factually innocent.5 ‘[H]omicides account for almost 80 percent of the total crimes recounted in the true crime books’. Alexis M Durham III, H Preston Elrod and Patrick T Kinkade, ‘Images of Crime and Justice: Murder and the “True Crime” Genre’ (1995) 23 Journal of Criminal Justice 143, 146.6 Jean Murley, The Rise of True Crime: 20th-Century Murder and American Popular Culture (Praeger Publishers 2008) 3.7 Diana Rickard, ‘Truth or Doubt: Questioning Legal Outcomes in True-Crime Documentaries’ (2022) 17 Law and Humanities 1, 3.8 Also called websleuths, armchair detectives, and cyber detectives.9 Elizabeth Yardley and others, ‘What’s the Deal with ‘Websleuthing’? News Media Representations of Amateur Detectives in Networked Spaces’ (2018) 14 Crime, Media, Culture 81.10 See Herbert Packer, The Limits of the Criminal Sanction (Stanford University Press 1968); Herbert Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (1964) 113 University of Pennsylania Law Review 1.11 Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ 12.12 ibid 5.13 ibid 13.14 ibid.15 Kent Roach, ‘Four Models of the Criminal Process’ (1998) 89 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 671.16 Roach (n 15) 692.17 It is beyond the scope of the work here but most crime is not reported, and most reported crime is never solved. This is one of the insights that makes Packer’s models unworkable as models of an actual system.18 Roach (n 15) 672.19 Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (n 10) 12.20 Robert Fitzgerald and Phoebe C Ellsworth, ‘Due Process vs. Crime Control: Death Qualification and Jury Attitudes’ (1984) 8 Law and Human Behavior 31.21 M Sandys and others, ‘Stacking the Deck for Guilt and Death: The Failure of Death Qualification to Ensure Impartiality’ in JR Acker, RM Bohm and CS Lanier (eds), America’s Experiment with Capital Punishment: Reflections on the Past, Present, and Future of the Ultimate Penal Sanction (3rd edn, Carolina Academic Press 2014).22 Richard Jones, ‘Populist Leniency, Crime Control and Due Process’ (2010) 14 Theoretical Criminology 331, 335.23 Laura Vitis and Vanessa Ryan, ‘True Crime Podcasts in Australia: Examining Listening Patterns and Listener Perceptions’ (2021) 30 Journal of Radio & Audio Media 1, 2.24 Lisa A Kort-Butler and Kelley J Sittner Hartshorn, ‘Watching the Detectives: Crime Programming, Fear of Crime, and Attitudes about the Criminal Justice System’ (2011) 52 The Sociological Quarterly 36, 48.25 Colleen M Ray and Lisa A Kort-Butler, ‘What you See is What you Get? Investigating How Survey Context Shapes the Association between Media Consumption and Attitudes about Crime’ (2020) 45 American Journal of Criminal Justice 914, 928.26 Susan Weiner, ‘True Crime: Fact, Fiction, and the Law’ (1993) 17 Legal Studies Forum 275, 287.27 Walter Lee Campbell, ‘From Tough-on-Crime to Smart-on-Crime: The Racial Impact of Policing Felony Drug Offenses in the 21st Century’ (PhD dissertation. Rutgers University-Graduate School-Newark 2019) 5–10.28 Sara M Walsh, ‘Safety Spheres: Danger Mapping and Spatial Justice’ (2015) 22 Race, Gender & Class 122, 123.29 Anita Biressi, ‘Death in the Good Old Days: True Crime Tales and Social History’ in Cultural Studies and the Working Class (Bloomsbury Publishing 2000) 180; Amanda M Vicary and R Chris Fraley, ‘Captured by True Crime: Why are Women Drawn to Tales of Rape, Murder, and Serial Killers?’ (2010) 1 Social Psychological and Personality Science 81, 82.30 Nicole Hahn Rafter, Shots in the Mirror: Crime Films and Society (2nd edn, Oxford University Press, USA 2006).31 Mark Seltzer, True Crime: Observations on Violence and Modernity (Routledge 2013), 37.32 Murley (n 6) 2, 6.33 ‘Each NIBRS offense belongs to one of three categories: Crimes Against Persons, Crimes Against Property, and Crimes Against Society. Crimes Against Persons (e.g. murder, rape, and assault), are those whose victims are always individuals. The object of Crimes Against Property (e.g. robbery, bribery, and burglary), is to obtain money, property, or some other benefit. Crimes Against Society (e.g. gambling, prostitution, and drug violations), represent society’s prohibition against engaging in certain types of activity; they are typically victimless crimes in which property is not the object.’ National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program, Crimes Against Persons, Property, and Society 2012).34 See Bergen Evans website: www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~immer/booksmain. His page ‘The Books of the Century’ contains, among other lists, the top ten bestsellers in nonfiction, by, year, as recorded by Publishers Weekly.35 Alice Payne Hackett and James Henry Burke, 80 Years of Best Sellers: 1895-1975 (New York: RR Bowker Company 1977), 198.36 David Stout, ‘Vincent T. Bugliosi, Manson Prosecutor and True-Crime Author, Dies at 80’ The New York Times (9 June 2015) accessed 7 December 2023.37 Keith L Justice, Bestseller Index: All Books, by Author, on the Lists of Publishers Weekly and the New York Times Through 1990 (McFarland 1998).38 Publishers Weekly, Top 25: Top 25 Best Sellers of the 1980s (Deseret News 1989).39 Christine Mai-Duc, ‘Ann Rule Dies at 83; True-Crime Writer Penned Account of Ted Bundy’ Los Angeles Times (27 July 2015) .40 Simon & Schuster, ‘Ann Rule’ accessed 7 December 2023.41 Daniel Immerwahr, ‘The Books of the Century: 1990–1999’ accessed 7 December 2023.42 Publishers Weekly, ‘Publishers Weekly Annual Adult Bestsellers 1990–2013’ accessed 7 December 2023.43 The New York Times Book Review, ‘Paperback Nonfiction’ The New York Times (4 March 2018) .44 Witness by Amber Frey (January 23, January 30, 2005), Blood Brother by Anne Bird (March 20, March 27, 2005), A Deadly Game by Catherine Crier (April 3, 2005), The City of Falling Angels by John Berendt (October 16, October 23, 2005), For Laci by Sharon Rocha (January 29, February 5, 2006).45 The New York Times Book Review, ‘Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction’ The New York Times (29 April 2018) .46 Seltzer (n 31) 35.47 Weiner, ‘True Crime: Fact, Fiction, and the Law’ (n 26) 284.48 Stella Bruzzi, ‘Making a Genre: The Case of the Contemporary True Crime Documentary’ (2016) 10 Law and Humanities 249, 251; Elizabeth Yardley, Emma Kelly and Shona Robinson-Edwards, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism? The Serialized True Crime Podcast as a Wake-Up Call in Times of Criminological Slumber’ (2019) 15 Crime, Media, Culture 503, 512.49 Voss (n 1) 147.50 Murley (n 6) 1.51 Brian Jarvis, ‘Monsters Inc.: Serial Killers and Consumer Culture’ (2007) 3 Crime, Media, Culture 326, 329.52 ‘The conventions of true crime’s forensic realism are immediately visible. That realism involves the sudden eruption of violence from beneath a therefore deceptively normal surface of things; that is, it involves the convention of penetrating beneath convention, beneath the clichés, of an everyday and statistical normality (a Wednesday, a school day, a neighborhood, a family). This is, more precisely, the stripping away of a fiction of normality-- the normal fiction: a normality that looks nothing but a self-exposing childhood fantasy of innocence, a Robin Hood story, a paradise lost’. Seltzer (n 31) 41–42.53 Rachel Franks writes that the detective came to replace God in true crime writing in the late 1800’s, that the detective ‘is uniquely equipped to identify, hunt down, and bring the abhorrent offender to justice … The detective is all-knowing and all-powerful against a world of corruption, crime, and sin but is also, like us, flawed and subject to failure’. Rachel Franks, ‘True Crime: The Regular Reinvention of a Genre’ (2016) 1 Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture 239–54.54 Murley (n 6) 1.55 ibid 82.56 Drew Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ in Nicole Rafter (ed), Shots in the Mirror (2nd edn, Oxford University Press 2006).57 See Packer, ‘Two Models of the Criminal Process’ (n 10) 239. Though at the end of his life Packer thought that this due process revolution had failed. Roach (n 15).58 Truman Capote, In Cold Blood (Vintage International 1965).59 Hackett and Burke, 80 Years of Best Sellers: 1895-1975 (n 35).60 Voss (n 1).61 Capote (n 58) 11.62 By today’s standards. The courts ruled otherwise at the time in this case.63 Capote (n 58) 293.64 Andrew T Burt, ‘True Crime Does Pay: Narratives of Wrongdoing in Film and Literature’ (PhD dissertation. Northern Illinois University 2017).65 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 47.66 Vincent Bugliosi and Curt Gentry, Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders (W.W. Norton & Company 1994).67 He offers his respect to the methods and procedures of the younger, more educated police investigating one of the murders.68 Bugliosi and Gentry (n 66) 167.69 Albert W Alschuler, ‘Plea Bargaining and its History’ (1979) 79 Colombia Law Review 1.70 Jed S Rakoff, ‘Why Innocent People Plead Guilty’ The New York Review of Books accessed 7 December 2023.71 There are a few exceptions, but this is beyond the scope here.72 Bugliosi and Gentry (n 66) 281.73 ibid 376.74 Timothy O Lenz, Changing Images of Law in Film & Television Crime Stories (Peter Lang Inc. 2003).75 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 49.76 ibid 20.77 See Lenz (n 74).78 Ann Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster 1980).79 Ann Rule is a female crime writer explicitly addressing a largely female audience, while the vast majority of known serial killers are men. Brian Jarvis writes that ‘from a feminist perspective it could be argued that serial killing is not so much a radical departure from normal codes of civilized behavior as it is an intensification of hegemonic masculine ideals … The serial killer is driven by the desire to achieve mastery, virility and control: his objective is to dominate and possess the body and the mind of his victims’. If we know anything about violence against women, it is that it is prevalent and largely private. In this way, violence lurking under a normal facade is part of women’s everyday and collective lives. It is no surprise that true crime writing, and Ann Rule in particular, is read by more women than men. Indeed, it is in Ann Rule’s writing that we see Ted Bundy as not just a man but ‘men’ – women are both sexually attracted to Bundy and drawn to his pleas for help, which puts the women’s lives in danger. Laura Browder found that many women revealed that they read true crime to help them deal with violence in their past and manage current fears. Laura Browder, ‘Dystopian Romance: True Crime and the Female Reader’ (2006) 39 The Journal of Popular Culture 928; Jarvis, (n 51) 333.80 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) xvii.81 Policing is generally reactive in nature. That is, police enter the scene after the crime has been committed.82 Ironically, Ted Bundy seems to be a big fan of law-and-order politics. Rule tells us about his participation in Republican politics, and his deep dislike of anarchy and the general mayhem of student protests on college campuses. Had he succeeded in his Republican political ambitions of the time he likely would have been a ‘law and order’, ‘tough on crime’, conservative candidate running on a crime control platform.83 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) 130.84 He escapes during a law library visit and is aided by an area map he obtained during discovery while acting as his own attorney.85 Rule, The Stranger Beside Me (n 78) 245.86 See Thomas G Blomberg and Stanley Cohen, Punishment and Social Control (2nd edn, Aldine de Gruyter 2003).87 Blomberg and Cohen (n 86).88 Todd, ‘The History of Crime Films’ (n 56) 53.89 Rafter (n 30) 78.90 John Berendt, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (Vintage Books 1994).91 Voss (n 1) 49.92 If you consider being tried four times ‘getting away’ with something. The author seemingly sides with yes.93 2 guilty verdicts, 1 mistrial, 1 not guilty.94 Berendt (n 90) 237.95 The author is a New Yorker and there is a distinct tone here that racism and classism are Southern issues.96 David Dagan and Steven M Teles, ‘Locked in? Conservative Reform and the Future of Mass Incarceration’ (2014) 651 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 266.97 Katherine Beckett, Anna Reosti and Emily Knaphus, ‘The End of an Era? Understanding the Contradictions of Criminal Justice Reform’ (2016) 664 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 238.98 DPIC Death Penalty Information Center, ‘State by State’ (2019) accessed 7 July 2019.99 Erik Larson, Devil in the White City (Vintage Books 2003).100 Michelle McNamara, I’ll Be Gone in the Dark (HarperCollins 2018).101 Larson (n 99) 395.102 ibid 85.103 John Gramlich, ‘What the Data Says About Gun Deaths in the U.S.’ (Pew Research Center, 2023) accessed 20 July 2023.104 NPD, ‘“Fifty Shades of Grey” Was the Best-Selling Book of the Decade in the U.S., The NPD Group Says’ 2019) accessed 20 July 2023.105 Yardley and others, ‘What’s the Deal with ‘Websleuthing’?’ (n 9).106 Rachel Monroe, Savage Appetites: True Stories of Women, Crime, and Obsession (Scribner 2020) 56.107 McNamara (n 100) 83.108 ibid 237.109 ibid 105.110 It is eventually submitted and used to capture the killer, but this is after publication and the author’s death.111 McNamara (n 100) 303.112 See ibid 102.113 ibid 271.114 Yardley and others, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 505.115 Rickard (n 7) 3.116 John Grisham, The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town (Dell 2012).117 Brian Stevenson, Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption (Random House Publishing Group 2014).118 See Lili Pâquet, ‘Literary Forensic Rhetoric: Maps, Emotional Assent, and Rhetorical Space in Serial and Making a Murderer’ (2018) 12 Law and Humanities 71.119 Karen Halttunen, Murder Most Foul: The Killer and the American Gothic Imagination (Harvard University Press 1998) 36.120 Halttunen (n 119) 78–79.121 Alexandra Thompson and Susannah N Tapp, Criminal Victimization, 2021 (U.S. Department of Justice- Office of Justice Programs 2023).122 Monroe (106) 1.123 Franks (n 53) 251.124 Murley (n 6) 3.125 Yardley, Kelly and Robinson-Edwards, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 504.126 Richard Berry, ‘A Golden Age of Podcasting – Evaluating Serial in the Context of Podcast Histories Symposium – Podcasting: A Decade in the Life of a New Audio Medium’ (2015) 22 Journal of Radio & Audio Media 170, 174.127 Elisa Shearer and others, ‘Podcast Use Among Different Age Groups’ (Pew Research Center, 2023) accessed 12 July 2023.128 Yolander G Hurst and James Frank, ‘How Kids View Cops: The Nature of Juvenile Attitudes Toward the Police’ (2000) 28 Journal of Criminal Justice 189.129 Spotify, ‘About Spotify’ accessed 17 July 2023.130 Daniel Ruby, ‘Spotify Stats 2023 — Subscribers, Revenue & Other Insights’ (2023) accessed 17 July 2023.131 Scott Swan, ‘“Queen of True Crime” Expands Podcasting Business in Indianapolis’ WTHR 13 (2 November 2022) .132 See Monroe (n 106) 6–7.133 Yardley and others, ‘Forever Trapped in the Imaginary of Late Capitalism?’ (n 48) 509.134 Danielle C Slakoff, ‘The Representation of Women and Girls of Color in United States Crime News’ Sociology Compass 2.135 Vitis and Ryan (n 23) 16.136 See Rickard (n 7).
期刊介绍:
Law and Humanities is a peer-reviewed journal, providing a forum for scholarly discourse within the arts and humanities around the subject of law. For this purpose, the arts and humanities disciplines are taken to include literature, history (including history of art), philosophy, theology, classics and the whole spectrum of performance and representational arts. The remit of the journal does not extend to consideration of the laws that regulate practical aspects of the arts and humanities (such as the law of intellectual property). Law and Humanities is principally concerned to engage with those aspects of human experience which are not empirically quantifiable or scientifically predictable. Each issue will carry four or five major articles of between 8,000 and 12,000 words each. The journal will also carry shorter papers (up to 4,000 words) sharing good practice in law and humanities education; reports of conferences; reviews of books, exhibitions, plays, concerts and other artistic publications.