This book illustrates the importance of conflicting narratives in understanding and dealing with crime, based on a variety of cutting-edge research. Offenders tell stories about crime and punishment, as do policemen, judges and defence lawyers, but so do politicians and the media. Each tells them very differently and only some stories are believed, while others are rejected as implausible leading to conflict. This book explores how these conflicts are carried out and what relationships exist between (often unquestioned) master narratives and (sometimes loud, sometimes silent) counter-narratives? These are questions of central importance for criminology which have thus far received little attention. This edited collection is international and interdisciplinary in scope, providing empirical insights from such diverse contexts as (social) media, newspapers, comics, police interrogations, social and criminal justice settings, and museum exhibitions. By including contributions froma wide spectrum of academic disciplines and using different methodological approaches, it is of particular interest to students and researchers in criminology and sociology, as well as to scholars of socio-legal studies.                 
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This book illustrates the importance of conflicting narratives in understanding and dealing with crime, based on a variety of cutting-edge research.
1.  Fighting For The ‘Right’ Narrative: Introduction To Conflicting Narratives Of Crime And Punishment, Martina Althoff, Bernd Dollinger, Holger Schmidt.-   2. Counter-Narratives Of Crime And Punishment, Michael Bamberg, Zachary Wipff.- 3. Small Stories Research And Narrative Criminology: ‘Plotting’ An Alliance, Alex Georgakopoulou.- 4. Public Narratives Of Crime And Criminal Justice: Connecting ‘Small’ And ‘Big’ Stories To Make Public Narratives Visible, Martina Feilzer.- 5. Crime And Narration. The Creation Of (In)Security In Everyday Life, Katharina Eisch-Angus.- 6. Popular And Visual Narratives Of Punishment In Museum Settings, Hannah Thurston.- 7. Conflicting Counternarratives Of Crime And Justice In U.S. Superhero Comics , Daniel Stein.- 8. Sympathies And Scandals: (Counter-)Narratives Of Criminality And Policing In Inter-War Britain, John Carter Wood.- 9. ‘Let’s Put Human Rights Right’: (Counter-)Narratives About Human Rights In The UK Popular Press,Lieve Gies.- 10. Files As Prototypical Master Narratives, Mechthild Bereswill, Henrike Buhr, Patrick Müller.- 11. Practical Narratives In The Criminal Law Process: The Suspect’s Statemen, Martha Komter.- 12. Competing Narratives In The Nexus Of Migration-Crime-Gender, Maria De Angelis.- 13. Stories Of Gender And Migration, Crime And Security: Between Outrage And Denial, Martina Althoff.
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This book illustrates the importance of conflicting narratives in understanding and dealing with crime, based on a variety of cutting-edge research. Offenders tell stories about crime and punishment, as do policemen, judges and defence lawyers, but so do politicians and the media. Each tells them very differently and only some stories are believed, while others are rejected as implausible leading to conflict. This book explores how these conflicts are carried out and what relationships exist between (often unquestioned) master narratives and (sometimes loud, sometimes silent) counter-narratives. These are issues of central importance for criminology which have thus far received little attention.This edited collection is international and interdisciplinary in scope, providing empirical insights from such diverse contexts as (social) media, newspapers, comics, police interrogations, social and criminal justice settings, and museum exhibitions. By including contributions from a wide spectrum of academic disciplines and using different methodological approaches, it is of particular interest to students and researchers in criminology and sociology, as well as to scholars of socio-legal studies.  
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“We should not have had to wait so long for the narrative turn to come to criminology when crime is clearly a phenomenon begging for narrative analysis: the human struggle between desire and the law. Narratives help to explicate – describe, locate, retell - events across their temporal unfolding while exposing inferences, contradictions, ellipses in what is known. This brilliantly conceived and executed collection provides a rich combination of narrative analyses and criminological scholarship to powerfully challenge popular and conventional theories of crime while offering more subtle, reliable, and sustainable accounts. This book shifts our focus to look more deeply at what we thought we already knew. An important book.” (Susan S. Silbey, Leon and Anne Goldberg Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US)
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Examines conflicting narratives in diverse criminological contexts Sets the theoretical foundations for this emerging area of study Includes a section on narrations of gender, crime and migration
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783030472351
Publisert
2020-07-19
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Biographical note

Martina Althoff is Associate Professor of criminology at the University of Groningen, Department of Criminal Law and Criminology, The Netherlands.
Bernd Dollinger is Professor of social pedagogy at the University of Siegen, Department of Educational Science and Psychology, Germany. 
Holger Schmidt is Assistant Professor at the TU Dort­mund University, Department of Social Education, Adult Education and Early Childhood Education, Germany.