ラウトレッジ版 ビジュアル犯罪学ハンドブック<br>Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminology

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ラウトレッジ版 ビジュアル犯罪学ハンドブック
Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminology

  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780367581213
  • eISBN:9781317497530

ファイル: /

Description

Dynamically written and richly illustrated, the Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminology offers the first foundational primer on visual criminology. Spanning a variety of media and visual modes, this volume assembles established researchers whose work is essential to understanding the role of the visual in criminology and emergent thinkers whose work is taking visual criminology in new directions.

This book is divided into five parts that each highlight a key aspect of visual criminology, exploring the diversity of methods, techniques and theoretical approaches currently shaping the field:

• Part I introduces formative positions in the developments of visual criminology and explores the different disciplines that have contributed to analysing images.

• Part II explores visual representations of crime across film, graphic art, documentary, police photography, press coverage and graffiti and urban aesthetics.

• Part III discusses the relationship of visual criminology to criminal justice institutions like policing, punishment and law.

• Part IV focuses on the distinctive ethical problems posed by the image, reflecting on the historical development, theoretical disputes and methodological issues involved.

• Part V identifies new frameworks and emergent perspectives and reflects upon the distinctive challenges and limits that can be seen in this emerging field.

This book includes a vibrant colour plate section and over a hundred black and white images, breaking down the barriers between original photography and artwork, historic paintings and illustrations and modern comics and films. This interdisciplinary book will be of interest to criminologists, sociologists, visual ethnographers, art historians and those engaged with media studies.

Table of Contents

 

  1. Introducing Visual Criminology, Michelle Brown and Eamonn Carrabine
  2. Part I: Foundations – History, Theory Methods

  3. Law, evidence and representation, Katherine Biber
  4. Social science and visual culture, Eamonn Carrabine
  5. "We never, never talked about photography": Documentary photography, visual criminology, and method, Jeff Ferrell
  6. Crime films and visual criminology, Nicole Rafter
  7. Key methods of visual criminology: An overview of different approaches and their affordances, Luc Pauwels
  8. Visions of legitimacy: Public criminology, the image and the legitimation of the carceral state, Jonathan Simon
  9. Carceral geography and the spatialization of carceral studies, Dominique Moran
  10. Art and its unruly histories: Old and new formations, Eamonn Carrabine
  11. Part II: Images and Crime

  12. Making the criminal visible: photography and criminality, Jonathan Finn
  13. Documentary criminology: A cultural criminological introduction, Keith Hayward
  14. Going feral: Kamp Katrina as a case study of documentary criminology, David Redmon
  15. Mediated suffering, Sandra Walklate
  16. Media, popular culture and the lone wolf terrorist: The evolution of targeting, tactics and violent ideologies, Mark Hamm and Ramón Spaaij
  17. Representing the pedophile, Steven Kohm
  18. Street art, graffiti and urban aesthetics, Alison Young
  19. Risky business: Visual representations in corporate crime films, Gray Cavender and Nancy Jurik
  20. Crimesploitation, Paul Kaplan and Daniel LaChance
  21. Part III: Images and Criminal Justice

  22. In plain view: Violence and the police image. Travis Linneman
  23. The role of the visual in the restoration of social order, Tony Kearon
  24. Opening a window on probation cultures: A photographic imagination, Anne Worrall, Nicola Carr and Gwen Robinson
  25. How does the photograph punish?, Phil Carney
  26. The visual retreat of the prison: Non-places for Non-people, Yvonne Jewkes, Eleanor Slee and Dominique Moran
  27. Pervasive punishment: Experiencing supervision, Wendy Fitzgibbon, Christine Graebsch and Fergus McNeill
  28. Graphic justice and criminological aesthetics: Visual criminology on the streets of Gotham, Thomas Giddens
  29. Part IV: Accusing Images and Images Accused

  30. Staged imagery of killing and torture: Ethical and normative dimensions of seeing, Lieve Gies
  31. Jus Des(s)erts? Crime and Punishment in the Italian Last Judgement, Lisa Wade
  32. Visualizing blackness – racializing gameness: Social inequalities in virtual gaming communities, Jordan Mazurek and Kishonna Gray
  33. Visual power and sovereignty: Indigenous art and colonialism, Chris Cuneen
  34. Asylum seekers and moving images: Walking, sensorial encounters and visual criminology, Maggie O’Neill
  35. Visual criminology and cultural memory: The aestheticization of boat people, Jacqueline Wilson
  36. Seeing and seeing-as: Building a politics of visibility in criminology, Sarah Armstrong
  37. The concerned criminologist: Refocusing the ethos of socially committed photographic research, Cécile Van de Voorde
  38. Los Angeles, urban history and neo-noir cinema, Gareth Millington
  39. Against a "humanizing" prison cinema: The Prison in Twelve Landscapes and the politics of abolition imagery, Brett Story
  40. Part V: Future Directions

  41. Fascinated receptivity and the visual unconscious of crime, Stephen Pfohl
  42. The criminologist as visual scholar in a global mediascape, Michelle Brown
  43. Sunk capital, sinking prisons, stinking landfills: Landscape, ideology, visuality and the carceral state in central Appalachia, Judah Schept
  44. Territorial coding in street art and censure: Ernest Pignon-Ernest’s contribution to visual criminology, Ronnie Lippens
  45. Representations of environmental crime and harm: A green-cultural criminological perspective on Human-Altered Landscapes, Avi Brisman
  46. There’s no place like home: Encountering crime and criminality in representations of the domestic, Michael Fiddler
  47. Monstrous nature: A meeting of gothic, green and cultural criminologies, Nigel South