Emotions and Crime
Towards a Criminology of Emotions
Herausgeber: Jacobsen, Michael Hviid; Walklate, Sandra
Emotions and Crime
Towards a Criminology of Emotions
Herausgeber: Jacobsen, Michael Hviid; Walklate, Sandra
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Building on research into emotions within sociology, this book seeks to show how criminologists can take emotions seriously and why criminology needs to begin considering emotions as a central element of its theoretical, conceptual and methodological apparatus.
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Building on research into emotions within sociology, this book seeks to show how criminologists can take emotions seriously and why criminology needs to begin considering emotions as a central element of its theoretical, conceptual and methodological apparatus.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 228
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 13mm
- Gewicht: 340g
- ISBN-13: 9780367727918
- ISBN-10: 0367727919
- Artikelnr.: 60799370
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 228
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. März 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 13mm
- Gewicht: 340g
- ISBN-13: 9780367727918
- ISBN-10: 0367727919
- Artikelnr.: 60799370
Michael Hviid Jacobsen is Professor of Sociology at Aalborg University, Denmark. He is the editor of The Poetics of Crime, Postmortal Society, and Emotions, Everyday Life and Sociology and co-editor of The Sociology of Zygmunt Bauman, Encountering the Everyday, The Transformation of Modernity , Utopia: Social Theory and the Future, Liquid Criminology, and Imaginative Methodologies: The Poetic Imagination in the Social Sciences. Sandra Walklate is Eleanor Rathbone Chair of Sociology at the University of Liverpool, UK and Conjoint Chair of Criminology at Monash University, Australia. She is the co-author of Victims: Trauma, Testimony, Justice and The Contradictions of Terrorism, and the co-editor of Liquid Criminology: Doing Imaginative Criminological Research.
Introduction: Crime and Emotions, Emotions and Crime Part 1: Crime and
Emotions 1. Male Violence Against Women in Intimate Relationships: The
Contribution of Stress and Male Peer Support 2. The Role of Emotions for
Female Co-Offenders 3. American Self-Radicalising Terrorists and
Conversions to Radical Action: Emotional Factors and the Allure of 'Jihadi
Cool/Chic' 4. 'Violence is Difficult, Not Easy': The Emotion Dynamics of
Mass Atrocities Part 2: Punishment and Emotions 5. '45 Colour Photographs':
Images, Emotions and the Victim of Domestic Violence 6. Punitiveness and
the Emotions of Punishment: Between Solidarity and Hostility 7. Capital
Punishment and the Emotional Public Sphere in Mid-20th Century Britain
Part 3: Doing Criminology as Emotion Work 8. Prison Life as 'Emotion
Culture': Reflections on Some of the Emotional Challenges of Conducting
Prison Ethnography 9. Witnessing, Responsibility and Spectatorship in the
Aftermath of Violence: Reflections from Srebrenica 10. Death Justice:
Navigating Contested Death in the Digital Age 11. 'Feeling Criminology':
Learning from Emotions in Criminological Research Postscript: Concluding
Thoughts: Some Lessons from Being 'Liminal'
Emotions 1. Male Violence Against Women in Intimate Relationships: The
Contribution of Stress and Male Peer Support 2. The Role of Emotions for
Female Co-Offenders 3. American Self-Radicalising Terrorists and
Conversions to Radical Action: Emotional Factors and the Allure of 'Jihadi
Cool/Chic' 4. 'Violence is Difficult, Not Easy': The Emotion Dynamics of
Mass Atrocities Part 2: Punishment and Emotions 5. '45 Colour Photographs':
Images, Emotions and the Victim of Domestic Violence 6. Punitiveness and
the Emotions of Punishment: Between Solidarity and Hostility 7. Capital
Punishment and the Emotional Public Sphere in Mid-20th Century Britain
Part 3: Doing Criminology as Emotion Work 8. Prison Life as 'Emotion
Culture': Reflections on Some of the Emotional Challenges of Conducting
Prison Ethnography 9. Witnessing, Responsibility and Spectatorship in the
Aftermath of Violence: Reflections from Srebrenica 10. Death Justice:
Navigating Contested Death in the Digital Age 11. 'Feeling Criminology':
Learning from Emotions in Criminological Research Postscript: Concluding
Thoughts: Some Lessons from Being 'Liminal'
Introduction: Crime and Emotions, Emotions and Crime Part 1: Crime and
Emotions 1. Male Violence Against Women in Intimate Relationships: The
Contribution of Stress and Male Peer Support 2. The Role of Emotions for
Female Co-Offenders 3. American Self-Radicalising Terrorists and
Conversions to Radical Action: Emotional Factors and the Allure of 'Jihadi
Cool/Chic' 4. 'Violence is Difficult, Not Easy': The Emotion Dynamics of
Mass Atrocities Part 2: Punishment and Emotions 5. '45 Colour Photographs':
Images, Emotions and the Victim of Domestic Violence 6. Punitiveness and
the Emotions of Punishment: Between Solidarity and Hostility 7. Capital
Punishment and the Emotional Public Sphere in Mid-20th Century Britain
Part 3: Doing Criminology as Emotion Work 8. Prison Life as 'Emotion
Culture': Reflections on Some of the Emotional Challenges of Conducting
Prison Ethnography 9. Witnessing, Responsibility and Spectatorship in the
Aftermath of Violence: Reflections from Srebrenica 10. Death Justice:
Navigating Contested Death in the Digital Age 11. 'Feeling Criminology':
Learning from Emotions in Criminological Research Postscript: Concluding
Thoughts: Some Lessons from Being 'Liminal'
Emotions 1. Male Violence Against Women in Intimate Relationships: The
Contribution of Stress and Male Peer Support 2. The Role of Emotions for
Female Co-Offenders 3. American Self-Radicalising Terrorists and
Conversions to Radical Action: Emotional Factors and the Allure of 'Jihadi
Cool/Chic' 4. 'Violence is Difficult, Not Easy': The Emotion Dynamics of
Mass Atrocities Part 2: Punishment and Emotions 5. '45 Colour Photographs':
Images, Emotions and the Victim of Domestic Violence 6. Punitiveness and
the Emotions of Punishment: Between Solidarity and Hostility 7. Capital
Punishment and the Emotional Public Sphere in Mid-20th Century Britain
Part 3: Doing Criminology as Emotion Work 8. Prison Life as 'Emotion
Culture': Reflections on Some of the Emotional Challenges of Conducting
Prison Ethnography 9. Witnessing, Responsibility and Spectatorship in the
Aftermath of Violence: Reflections from Srebrenica 10. Death Justice:
Navigating Contested Death in the Digital Age 11. 'Feeling Criminology':
Learning from Emotions in Criminological Research Postscript: Concluding
Thoughts: Some Lessons from Being 'Liminal'