תוכן עניינים |
Introducing Visual Criminology, Michelle Brown and Eamonn Carrabine
Part I: Foundations - History, Theory Methods
Law, evidence and representation, Katherine Biber
Social science and visual culture, Eamonn Carrabine
"We never, never talked about photography": Documentary photography, visual criminology, and method, Jeff Ferrell
Crime films and visual criminology, Nicole Rafter
Key methods of visual criminology: An overview of different approaches and their affordances, Luc Pauwels
Visions of legitimacy: Public criminology, the image and the legitimation of the carceral state, Jonathan Simon
Carceral geography and the spatialization of carceral studies, Dominique Moran
Art and its unruly histories: Old and new formations, Eamonn Carrabine
Part II: Images and Crime
Making the criminal visible: photography and criminality, Jonathan Finn
Documentary criminology: A cultural criminological introduction, Keith Hayward
Going feral: Kamp Katrina as a case study of documentary criminology, David Redmon
Mediated suffering, Sandra Walklate
Media, popular culture and the lone wolf terrorist: The evolution of targeting, tactics and violent ideologies, Mark Hamm and Ramon Spaaij
Representing the pedophile, Steven Kohm
Street art, graffiti and urban aesthetics, Alison Young
Risky business: Visual representations in corporate crime films, Gray Cavender and Nancy Jurik
Crimesploitation, Paul Kaplan and Daniel LaChance
Part III: Images and Criminal Justice
In plain view: Violence and the police image. Travis Linneman
The role of the visual in the restoration of social order, Tony Kearon
Opening a window on probation cultures: A photographic imagination, Anne Worrall, Nicola Carr and Gwen Robinson
How does the photograph punish?, Phil Carney
The visual retreat of the prison: Non-places for Non-people, Yvonne Jewkes, Eleanor Slee and Dominique Moran
Pervasive punishment: Experiencing supervision, Wendy Fitzgibbon, Christine Graebsch and Fergus McNeill
Graphic justice and criminological aesthetics: Visual criminology on the streets of Gotham, Thomas Giddens
Part IV: Accusing Images and Images Accused
Staged imagery of killing and torture: Ethical and normative dimensions of seeing, Lieve Gies
Jus Des(s)erts? Crime and Punishment in the Italian Last Judgement, Lisa Wade
Visualizing blackness - racializing gameness: Social inequalities in virtual gaming communities, Jordan Mazurek and Kishonna Gray
Visual power and sovereignty: Indigenous art and colonialism, Chris Cuneen
Asylum seekers and moving images: Walking, sensorial encounters and visual criminology, Maggie O'Neill
Visual criminology and cultural memory: The aestheticization of boat people, Jacqueline Wilson
Seeing and seeing-as: Building a politics of visibility in criminology, Sarah Armstrong
The concerned criminologist: Refocusing the ethos of socially committed photographic research, Cecile Van de Voorde
Los Angeles, urban history and neo-noir cinema, Gareth Millington
Against a "humanizing" prison cinema: The Prison in Twelve Landscapes and the politics of abolition imagery, Brett Story
Part V: Future Directions
Fascinated receptivity and the visual unconscious of crime, Stephen Pfohl
The criminologist as visual scholar in a global mediascape, Michelle Brown
Sunk capital, sinking prisons, stinking landfills: Landscape, ideology, visuality and the carceral state in central Appalachia, Judah Schept
Territorial coding in street art and censure: Ernest Pignon-Ernest's contribution to visual criminology, Ronnie Lippens
Representations of environmental crime and harm: A green-cultural criminological perspective on Human-Altered Landscapes, Avi Brisman
There's no place like home: Encountering crime and criminality in representations of the domestic, Michael Fiddler
Monstrous nature: A meeting of gothic, green and cultural criminologies, Nigel South |
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