Introduction
Theorizing Media and Crime
Media ′Effects′
Strain Theory and Anomie
Marxism, Critical Criminology and the ′Dominant Ideology′
Approach
Pluralism, Competition and Ideological Struggle
Realism and Reception Analysis
Late-Modernity and Postmodernism
Cultural Criminology
The Construction of Crime News
News Values for a New Millennium
The Disappearance of Madeleine McCann: A Newsworthy Story par
Excellence
News Production and Consumption in a Digital Global Marketplace:
The Rise of the Citizen Journalist
News Values and Crime News Production: Some Concluding Thoughts
Media and Moral Panics
The Background to the Moral Panic Model
Problems with the Moral Panic Model
The Longevity and Legacy of the Moral Panic Model: Some Concluding
Thoughts
Media Constructions of Children: ′Evil Monsters′ and ′Tragic
Victims′
1993 - Children as ′Evil Monsters′
1996 - Children as ′Tragic Victims′
Guilt, Collusion and Voyeurism
Moral Panics and the Revival of ′Community′: Some Concluding
Thoughts
Media Misogyny: Monstrous Women
Psychoanalytic Perspectives
Feminist Perspectives
Honourable Fathers Vs. Monstrous Mothers: Some Concluding
Thoughts
Police, Offenders and Victims in the Media
The Mass Media and Fear of Crime
The Role of the Police
Crimewatch UK
Crimewatching Crime: Some Concluding Thoughts
Crime Films and Prison Films
The Appeal of Crime Films
The Crime Film: Masculinity, Autonomy, the City
The ′Prison Film′
The Documentary
The Remake
Discussion
Concluding Thoughts
Crime and the Surveillance Culture
Panopticism
The Surveillant Assemblage
From the Panopticon to Surveillant Assemblage and Back Again
′Big Brother′ Or ′Brave New World′?: Some Concluding Thoughts
The Role of the Internet in Crime and Deviance
Redefining Deviance And Democratization: Developing Nations and the
Case of China
′Ordinary′ Cybercrimes
Childhood, Cyberspace and Social Retreat
Concluding Thoughts
(Re)-Conceptualizing the Relationship Between Media and Crime
Doing Media-Crime Research
Stigmatization, Sentimentalization and Sanctification: The
′Othering′ of Victims And Offenders
Yvonne Jewkes is Professor of Criminology at the University of Bath
and Honorary Visiting Professor at the University of Melbourne. She
has been carrying out prison research—much of it ethnography—for
over 20 years and has spent the last decade researching and writing
about prison architecture and design and their potential to
rehabilitate. She has recently held two Economic and Social
Research Council grants to study these topics and has worked as a
consultant to prison architects and senior prison service personnel
around the world. She has published extensively on various aspects
of prisons and imprisonment, including (with Ben Crewe and Jamie
Bennett) The Handbook on Prisons (2nd ed., 2016, Routledge). With
Ben Crewe and Thomas Ugelvik, she is the Founding Editor of the new
SAGE journal Incarceration.
′Yvonne Jewkes′ Media and Crime is a remarkable book-a book
remarkable for its critical, comprehensive engagement with the most
important of contemporary issues. As one of the top scholars in her
field, Jewkes provides a panoramic view across the full sweep of
media and crime, in all their many forms and entanglements, from
television crime coverage to internet search engines and situations
of surveillance. Taking the reader with her across this complex
cultural terrain, she reveals something else as well: the essential
insights into contemporary politics, power, and conflict that are
to be found where crime and media collide. In this light Media and
Crime becomes required reading not only for students and scholars
of crime and media, but for anyone interested in understanding the
dangerous dynamics of the late modern world′ - Jeff Ferrell, Texas
Christian University, US, and University of Kent, UK ′This second
edition of Jewkes′ treatise Media and Crime is the most
comprehensive volume to date on the major issues involved.
Analytically incisive and international as well as national in
orientation, it is a must for everyone preoccupied with media and
crime, and for all students engaged in the area′ - Thomas
Mathiesen, Professor of Sociology of Law, University of Oslo,
Norway ′The first edition set the standard for textbooks on crime
and media. This revised edition has raised the bar. Erudite,
authoritative, interdisciplinary and always engaging, Yvonne
Jewkes′ Media and Crime transports students to a genuinely
interesting place and makes other textbooks seem rather dull in
comparison. It looks set to remain a classroom favourite for some
time to come′ - Chris Greer, City University, UK.
′Yvonne Jewkes′ Media and Crime is a remarkable book-a book
remarkable for its critical, comprehensive engagement with the most
important of contemporary issues. As one of the top scholars in her
field, Jewkes provides a panoramic view across the full sweep of
media and crime, in all their many forms and entanglements, from
television crime coverage to internet search engines and situations
of surveillance. Taking the reader with her across this complex
cultural terrain, she reveals something else as well: the essential
insights into contemporary politics, power, and conflict that are
to be found where crime and media collide. In this light Media and
Crime becomes required reading not only for students and scholars
of crime and media, but for anyone interested in understanding the
dangerous dynamics of the late modern world′ - Jeff Ferrell, Texas
Christian University, US, and University of Kent, UK ′This second
edition of Jewkes′ treatise Media and Crime is the most
comprehensive volume to date on the major issues involved.
Analytically incisive and international as well as national in
orientation, it is a must for everyone preoccupied with media and
crime, and for all students engaged in the area′ - Thomas
Mathiesen, Professor of Sociology of Law, University of Oslo,
Norway ′The first edition set the standard for textbooks on crime
and media. This revised edition has raised the bar. Erudite,
authoritative, interdisciplinary and always engaging, Yvonne
Jewkes′ Media and Crime transports students to a genuinely
interesting place and makes other textbooks seem rather dull in
comparison. It looks set to remain a classroom favourite for some
time to come′ - Chris Greer, City University, UK.
*Jeff Ferrell*
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