The (Mis)Representation of Queer Lives in True Crime (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Goldberg, Abbie E.; Buist, Carrie L.; Slakoff, Danielle C.
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This book examines the representation and misrepresentation of queer people in true crime, addressing their status as both victims and perpetrators in actual crime, as well as how the media portrays them.
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This book examines the representation and misrepresentation of queer people in true crime, addressing their status as both victims and perpetrators in actual crime, as well as how the media portrays them.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 358
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. August 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000932416
- Artikelnr.: 68451292
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 358
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. August 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000932416
- Artikelnr.: 68451292
Abbie E. Goldberg (Ph.D.) is Professor in the Department of Psychology at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA, where she also currently serves as the Director of Women's and Gender Studies. She received her Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA. Her research examines diverse families, including LGBTQ-parent families and adoptive-parent families. She is the author of over 150 peer-reviewed articles and 4 books: LGBTQ Family Building: A Guide for Prospective Parents (2022), Open Adoption and Diverse Families (2020), Gay Dads (2012), and Lesbian and Gay Parents and Their Children (2010). She is the co-editor of three books: LGBTQ-Parent Families: Innovations in Research and Implications for Practice (2013, 2020), LGBTQ Divorce and Relationship Dissolution (2019), and The SAGE Encyclopedia of Trans Studies (2021), and the editor of The SAGE Encyclopedia of LGBTQ Studies (2016). She has received research funding from the American Psychological Association, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Williams Institute, the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, the National Institutes of Health, the Spencer Foundation, and other sources. She teaches courses on gender and crime, human sexuality, diversity in contemporary families, research methods with diverse families, the psychology of sexual orientation, and ethics in clinical psychology. Danielle C. Slakoff (Ph.D.) is Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at California State University, Sacramento, USA. She received her Ph.D. in Criminology and Justice from the University of Nebraska Omaha, USA, in 2018. Her research examines media representations of crime, gender, race/ethnicity, and domestic violence. Her research can be found in top journals such as Violence Against Women, The Journal of Family Violence, Feminist Media Studies, and Feminist Criminology. Her commentary has been featured on the nationally syndicated Tamron Hall show and in The New York Times, Washington Post, Time Magazine, NPR's Texas Public Radio, and dozen more outlets. In 2022, Dr. Slakoff won the Division of Feminist Criminology's Saltzman Award for Contributions to Practice. The Saltzman Award recognizes a criminologist whose professional accomplishments have increased the quality of justice and the level of safety for women through scholarship and activism. She teaches courses on media and crime, women's issues with the criminal legal system, and contemporary issues in criminal justice, among others. Carrie L. Buist (Ph.D.) is Associate Professor in the School of Criminology, Criminal Justice, and Legal Studies at Grand Valley State University, Allendale, Michigan, USA. Dr. Buist received her Ph.D. from Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan USA, in Sociology with concentrations in Criminology and Gender and Feminism. Dr. Buist's most current research focuses on the experience of justice-involved LGBTQ+ folks, and she has published and presented widely on the topic of queer criminology. Her co-written book Queer Criminology won The Division on Critical Criminology's Book of the Year Award in 2016, and she has been honored with numerous awards in research, teaching, and mentorship. Dr. Buist's publications also include but are not limited to Queering Criminology in Theory and Praxis: Reimaging Justice in the Criminal Legal System and Beyond (co-edited), Queer Criminology (co-written) (1st and 2nd editions), The Trifecta of Violence: A Sociological Comparison of Lynching and Violence Against Transgender Women (co-written), and LGBTQ Rights in the Fields of Criminal Law and Law Enforcement. Dr. Buist is currently working with students and law enforcement on cold case investigations.
Chapter 1. Introduction: Toward a Critical Examination of LGBTQ+ True Crime
by Danielle Slakoff, Carrie Buist, and Abbie E. Goldberg
LGBTQ People as Perpetrators
Chapter 2. Luck Be a Lady: Misrepresentations of Lesbian Serial Killers in
the Media
by Stacie Merken, Ph.D., and Lauren Moton, M. S.
Chapter 3. Mediated Representations and 'Missing' Representations of Queer
Male Serial Killers
by Brian J. Frederick, Ph.D
Chapter 4. Crimes of Duplicity: The Dangers of Demonizing Bisexuality
by Jason A. Brown, Brandon Golob, PhD, and Bruno Araujo
Chapter 5. Monsters with Mommy Issues: How Hollywood Invented the
"Terroristic Tranny"
by Emily Lenning, PhD. and Xavier Guadalupe-Diaz, PhD
LGBTQ People as Victims
Chapter 6. The Jenny Jones Show and the Gay Panic Defense in the 1990s,
W. Carsten Andresen, PhD.
Chapter 7. Criminalizing Sexual Identities: Queer, Female, and Wrongfully
Convicted
Valena Beety, JD
Chapter 8. Public Memory, LGBTQ (In)Visibility and Anti-Gay Violence: A
Frame Analysis of Media Discourse on the Murder of Matthew Shepard 25 Years
Later
by Jordan Blair Woods, JD
Chapter 9: The Hauntings of Kitty Genovese: The Bystander Effect and Queer
Invisibility
by Shanna N. Felix, PhD, and Merideth Garcia, PhD
Chapter 10: Trans Panic: The Representation of Trans Women as Murder
Victims in True Crime Podcasts
Christina DeJong, Max Osborn, PhD and Harnoor Kaur
Chapter 11: Difficult, Deceptive, and Dangerous: Portrayals of Victimized
Transgender Men in Crime News Coverage
by Max Osborn, PhD
Chapter 12: LGBTQ Youth: Homophobic Bullying and Gender Expression
by Jean-Anne Sutherland, PhD
Beyond the Victim vs. Offender Divide: Relational Complexities, Context,
and Community
Chapter 13: The Fallacy of the 'Lesbian Wolf Pack' Narrative:
Intersectional Complexities among LGBTQ Individuals of Color in the New
Jersey Four Case
by Carrie Teresa, PhD and Dana Radatz, PhD
Chapter 14: Media Representation of Intimate Partner Violence among Queer
Communities
by Nicole Johnson, PhD and Autumn Bermea, PhD
Chapter 15: LGBTQ Parents and Filicide: Focus on the Hart Family Murders
by Abbie E. Goldberg, PhD
Chapter 16: Discriminatory Laws and Biased Media: Considering the Harm to
the LGBTQ Community
by Adrian Copeland, JD, LaQuana Askew, and Carrie Buist, PhD
Chapter 17: Hate Crimes, Mass Shootings, and The Pulse Night Club Massacre
by Autumn Bermea, PhD
Chapter 18: ICE(D) Out: Exploration of Media Coverage of the Death and
Mistreatment of Trans Women in ICE Detention Facilities
by April Carrillo, PhD
Chapter 19: Conclusion by Carrie Buist, Danielle Slakoff, and Abbie
Goldberg
by Danielle Slakoff, Carrie Buist, and Abbie E. Goldberg
LGBTQ People as Perpetrators
Chapter 2. Luck Be a Lady: Misrepresentations of Lesbian Serial Killers in
the Media
by Stacie Merken, Ph.D., and Lauren Moton, M. S.
Chapter 3. Mediated Representations and 'Missing' Representations of Queer
Male Serial Killers
by Brian J. Frederick, Ph.D
Chapter 4. Crimes of Duplicity: The Dangers of Demonizing Bisexuality
by Jason A. Brown, Brandon Golob, PhD, and Bruno Araujo
Chapter 5. Monsters with Mommy Issues: How Hollywood Invented the
"Terroristic Tranny"
by Emily Lenning, PhD. and Xavier Guadalupe-Diaz, PhD
LGBTQ People as Victims
Chapter 6. The Jenny Jones Show and the Gay Panic Defense in the 1990s,
W. Carsten Andresen, PhD.
Chapter 7. Criminalizing Sexual Identities: Queer, Female, and Wrongfully
Convicted
Valena Beety, JD
Chapter 8. Public Memory, LGBTQ (In)Visibility and Anti-Gay Violence: A
Frame Analysis of Media Discourse on the Murder of Matthew Shepard 25 Years
Later
by Jordan Blair Woods, JD
Chapter 9: The Hauntings of Kitty Genovese: The Bystander Effect and Queer
Invisibility
by Shanna N. Felix, PhD, and Merideth Garcia, PhD
Chapter 10: Trans Panic: The Representation of Trans Women as Murder
Victims in True Crime Podcasts
Christina DeJong, Max Osborn, PhD and Harnoor Kaur
Chapter 11: Difficult, Deceptive, and Dangerous: Portrayals of Victimized
Transgender Men in Crime News Coverage
by Max Osborn, PhD
Chapter 12: LGBTQ Youth: Homophobic Bullying and Gender Expression
by Jean-Anne Sutherland, PhD
Beyond the Victim vs. Offender Divide: Relational Complexities, Context,
and Community
Chapter 13: The Fallacy of the 'Lesbian Wolf Pack' Narrative:
Intersectional Complexities among LGBTQ Individuals of Color in the New
Jersey Four Case
by Carrie Teresa, PhD and Dana Radatz, PhD
Chapter 14: Media Representation of Intimate Partner Violence among Queer
Communities
by Nicole Johnson, PhD and Autumn Bermea, PhD
Chapter 15: LGBTQ Parents and Filicide: Focus on the Hart Family Murders
by Abbie E. Goldberg, PhD
Chapter 16: Discriminatory Laws and Biased Media: Considering the Harm to
the LGBTQ Community
by Adrian Copeland, JD, LaQuana Askew, and Carrie Buist, PhD
Chapter 17: Hate Crimes, Mass Shootings, and The Pulse Night Club Massacre
by Autumn Bermea, PhD
Chapter 18: ICE(D) Out: Exploration of Media Coverage of the Death and
Mistreatment of Trans Women in ICE Detention Facilities
by April Carrillo, PhD
Chapter 19: Conclusion by Carrie Buist, Danielle Slakoff, and Abbie
Goldberg
Chapter 1. Introduction: Toward a Critical Examination of LGBTQ+ True Crime
by Danielle Slakoff, Carrie Buist, and Abbie E. Goldberg
LGBTQ People as Perpetrators
Chapter 2. Luck Be a Lady: Misrepresentations of Lesbian Serial Killers in
the Media
by Stacie Merken, Ph.D., and Lauren Moton, M. S.
Chapter 3. Mediated Representations and 'Missing' Representations of Queer
Male Serial Killers
by Brian J. Frederick, Ph.D
Chapter 4. Crimes of Duplicity: The Dangers of Demonizing Bisexuality
by Jason A. Brown, Brandon Golob, PhD, and Bruno Araujo
Chapter 5. Monsters with Mommy Issues: How Hollywood Invented the
"Terroristic Tranny"
by Emily Lenning, PhD. and Xavier Guadalupe-Diaz, PhD
LGBTQ People as Victims
Chapter 6. The Jenny Jones Show and the Gay Panic Defense in the 1990s,
W. Carsten Andresen, PhD.
Chapter 7. Criminalizing Sexual Identities: Queer, Female, and Wrongfully
Convicted
Valena Beety, JD
Chapter 8. Public Memory, LGBTQ (In)Visibility and Anti-Gay Violence: A
Frame Analysis of Media Discourse on the Murder of Matthew Shepard 25 Years
Later
by Jordan Blair Woods, JD
Chapter 9: The Hauntings of Kitty Genovese: The Bystander Effect and Queer
Invisibility
by Shanna N. Felix, PhD, and Merideth Garcia, PhD
Chapter 10: Trans Panic: The Representation of Trans Women as Murder
Victims in True Crime Podcasts
Christina DeJong, Max Osborn, PhD and Harnoor Kaur
Chapter 11: Difficult, Deceptive, and Dangerous: Portrayals of Victimized
Transgender Men in Crime News Coverage
by Max Osborn, PhD
Chapter 12: LGBTQ Youth: Homophobic Bullying and Gender Expression
by Jean-Anne Sutherland, PhD
Beyond the Victim vs. Offender Divide: Relational Complexities, Context,
and Community
Chapter 13: The Fallacy of the 'Lesbian Wolf Pack' Narrative:
Intersectional Complexities among LGBTQ Individuals of Color in the New
Jersey Four Case
by Carrie Teresa, PhD and Dana Radatz, PhD
Chapter 14: Media Representation of Intimate Partner Violence among Queer
Communities
by Nicole Johnson, PhD and Autumn Bermea, PhD
Chapter 15: LGBTQ Parents and Filicide: Focus on the Hart Family Murders
by Abbie E. Goldberg, PhD
Chapter 16: Discriminatory Laws and Biased Media: Considering the Harm to
the LGBTQ Community
by Adrian Copeland, JD, LaQuana Askew, and Carrie Buist, PhD
Chapter 17: Hate Crimes, Mass Shootings, and The Pulse Night Club Massacre
by Autumn Bermea, PhD
Chapter 18: ICE(D) Out: Exploration of Media Coverage of the Death and
Mistreatment of Trans Women in ICE Detention Facilities
by April Carrillo, PhD
Chapter 19: Conclusion by Carrie Buist, Danielle Slakoff, and Abbie
Goldberg
by Danielle Slakoff, Carrie Buist, and Abbie E. Goldberg
LGBTQ People as Perpetrators
Chapter 2. Luck Be a Lady: Misrepresentations of Lesbian Serial Killers in
the Media
by Stacie Merken, Ph.D., and Lauren Moton, M. S.
Chapter 3. Mediated Representations and 'Missing' Representations of Queer
Male Serial Killers
by Brian J. Frederick, Ph.D
Chapter 4. Crimes of Duplicity: The Dangers of Demonizing Bisexuality
by Jason A. Brown, Brandon Golob, PhD, and Bruno Araujo
Chapter 5. Monsters with Mommy Issues: How Hollywood Invented the
"Terroristic Tranny"
by Emily Lenning, PhD. and Xavier Guadalupe-Diaz, PhD
LGBTQ People as Victims
Chapter 6. The Jenny Jones Show and the Gay Panic Defense in the 1990s,
W. Carsten Andresen, PhD.
Chapter 7. Criminalizing Sexual Identities: Queer, Female, and Wrongfully
Convicted
Valena Beety, JD
Chapter 8. Public Memory, LGBTQ (In)Visibility and Anti-Gay Violence: A
Frame Analysis of Media Discourse on the Murder of Matthew Shepard 25 Years
Later
by Jordan Blair Woods, JD
Chapter 9: The Hauntings of Kitty Genovese: The Bystander Effect and Queer
Invisibility
by Shanna N. Felix, PhD, and Merideth Garcia, PhD
Chapter 10: Trans Panic: The Representation of Trans Women as Murder
Victims in True Crime Podcasts
Christina DeJong, Max Osborn, PhD and Harnoor Kaur
Chapter 11: Difficult, Deceptive, and Dangerous: Portrayals of Victimized
Transgender Men in Crime News Coverage
by Max Osborn, PhD
Chapter 12: LGBTQ Youth: Homophobic Bullying and Gender Expression
by Jean-Anne Sutherland, PhD
Beyond the Victim vs. Offender Divide: Relational Complexities, Context,
and Community
Chapter 13: The Fallacy of the 'Lesbian Wolf Pack' Narrative:
Intersectional Complexities among LGBTQ Individuals of Color in the New
Jersey Four Case
by Carrie Teresa, PhD and Dana Radatz, PhD
Chapter 14: Media Representation of Intimate Partner Violence among Queer
Communities
by Nicole Johnson, PhD and Autumn Bermea, PhD
Chapter 15: LGBTQ Parents and Filicide: Focus on the Hart Family Murders
by Abbie E. Goldberg, PhD
Chapter 16: Discriminatory Laws and Biased Media: Considering the Harm to
the LGBTQ Community
by Adrian Copeland, JD, LaQuana Askew, and Carrie Buist, PhD
Chapter 17: Hate Crimes, Mass Shootings, and The Pulse Night Club Massacre
by Autumn Bermea, PhD
Chapter 18: ICE(D) Out: Exploration of Media Coverage of the Death and
Mistreatment of Trans Women in ICE Detention Facilities
by April Carrillo, PhD
Chapter 19: Conclusion by Carrie Buist, Danielle Slakoff, and Abbie
Goldberg