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Subject of Murder, The: Gender, Exceptionality, and the Modern Killer


Subject of Murder, The: Gender, Exceptionality, and the Modern Killer

Hardback by Downing, Lisa

Subject of Murder, The: Gender, Exceptionality, and the Modern Killer

£80.00

ISBN:
9780226003405
Publication Date:
1 May 2013
Language:
English
Publisher:
The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:
University of Chicago Press
Pages:
256 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 28 - 30 May 2024
Subject of Murder, The: Gender, Exceptionality, and the Modern Killer

Description

The subject of murder has always held a particular fascination for us. But since at least the nineteenth century, we have seen the murderer as different from the ordinary citizen - a special individual who, like an artist or a genius, exists apart from the moral majority, a sovereign self who obeys only the destructive urge, sometimes even commanding cult followings. In contemporary culture, we continue to believe that there is something different and exceptional about killers, but is the murderer such a distinctive type? Are they degenerate beasts or supermen as they have been depicted on the page and the screen? Or are murderers something else entirely? In "The Subject of Murder", Lisa Downing explores the ways in which the figure of the murderer has been made to signify a specific kind of social subject in Western modernity. Drawing on the work of Foucault in her studies of the lives and crimes of killers in Europe and the United States, Downing interrogates the meanings of media and texts produced about and by murderers. Upending the usual treatment of murderers as isolated figures or exceptional individuals, Downing argues that they are ordinary people, reflections of our society at the intersections of gender, agency, desire, and violence.

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