The Human Obsession with True Crime: Murder, Media, Morality, Fear, Justice, and Why We Cannot Look Away - Couverture souple

Adler, Sky

 
9798901947104: The Human Obsession with True Crime: Murder, Media, Morality, Fear, Justice, and Why We Cannot Look Away

Synopsis

From scaffold crowds and penny dreadfuls to courtroom spectacles, televised trials, podcasts, documentaries, DNA breakthroughs, and online sleuths, true crime has followed every major change in media and public life. Its stories reveal not only acts of violence, but the societies that watch, judge, remember, and sometimes forget them.

The Human Obsession with True Crime traces the long history of crime storytelling and asks why real murder, disappearance, punishment, investigation, grief, and justice continue to hold such powerful public attention. Written in a polished, fact-based narrative style, the book explores the rise of sensational newspapers, the making of criminal celebrity, the serial killer era, forensic science, wrongful convictions, victim advocacy, moral panic, race and class in crime coverage, and the ethical responsibilities of turning real suffering into public narrative.

This is not a celebration of violence. It is a careful examination of the human need to understand it. At its centre is one enduring question: when crime exposes fear, failure, injustice, and loss, why do we keep looking-and how can we learn to look responsibly?

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