ISBN:
9781032246048
Language:
English
Pages:
x, 346 Seiten
,
Tabellen
DDC:
306.766
Keywords:
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Industries / Media & Communications Industries
;
Communication studies
;
Crime & criminology
;
Gay & Lesbian studies
;
Gender & the law
;
Gender Studies: Männer und Jungen
;
Gender studies: men
;
Kommunikationswissenschaft
;
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Communication
;
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Journalism
;
LAW / Gender & the Law
;
LGBTQ+ / Untersuchungen zu Homosexualität
;
Medienwissenschaften: TV und Gesellschaft
;
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy
;
PSYCHOLOGY / Social Psychology
;
Popular culture
;
Populäre Kultur
;
Press & journalism
;
Presse und Journalismus
;
Recht und Gesellschaft: Gender
;
LGBT
;
Kriminalität
;
Berichterstattung
;
Medien
Abstract:
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
Description / Table of Contents:
Chapter 1. Introduction: Toward a Critical Examination of LGBTQ+ True Crimeby Danielle Slakoff, Carrie Buist, and Abbie E. GoldbergLGBTQ People as PerpetratorsChapter 2. Luck Be a Lady: Misrepresentations of Lesbian Serial Killers in the Mediaby Stacie Merken, Ph.D., and Lauren Moton, M. S.Chapter 3. Mediated Representations and Missing Representations of Queer Male Serial Killersby Brian J. Frederick, Ph.DChapter 4. Crimes of Duplicity: The Dangers of Demonizing Bisexualityby Jason A. Brown, Brandon Golob, PhD, and Bruno AraujoChapter 5. Monsters with Mommy Issues: How Hollywood Invented the "Terroristic Tranny"by Emily Lenning, PhD. and Xavier Guadalupe-Diaz, PhDLGBTQ People as VictimsChapter 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 ConvictedValena Beety, JDChapter 8. Public Memory, LGBTQ (In)Visibility and Anti-Gay Violence: A Frame Analysis of Media Discourse on the Murder of Matthew Shepard 25 Years Laterby Jordan Blair Woods, JDChapter 9: The Hauntings of Kitty Genovese: The Bystander Effect and Queer Invisibilityby Shanna N. Felix, PhD, and Merideth Garcia, PhDChapter 10: Trans Panic: The Representation of Trans Women as Murder Victims in True Crime PodcastsChristina DeJong, Max Osborn, PhD and Harnoor KaurChapter 11: Difficult, Deceptive, and Dangerous: Portrayals of Victimized Transgender Men in Crime News Coverageby Max Osborn, PhDChapter 12: LGBTQ Youth: Homophobic Bullying and Gender Expressionby Jean-Anne Sutherland, PhDBeyond the Victim vs. Offender Divide: Relational Complexities, Context, and CommunityChapter 13: The Fallacy of the Lesbian Wolf Pack Narrative: Intersectional Complexities among LGBTQ Individuals of Color in the New Jersey Four Caseby Carrie Teresa, PhD and Dana Radatz, PhDChapter 14: Media Representation of Intimate Partner Violence among Queer Communitiesby Nicole Johnson, PhD and Autumn Bermea, PhDChapter 15: LGBTQ Parents and Filicide: Focus on the Hart Family Murdersby Abbie E. Goldberg, PhDChapter 16: Discriminatory Laws and Biased Media: Considering the Harm to the LGBTQ Communityby Adrian Copeland, JD, LaQuana Askew, and Carrie Buist, PhDChapter 17: Hate Crimes, Mass Shootings, and The Pulse Night Club Massacreby Autumn Bermea, PhDChapter 18: ICE(D) Out: Exploration of Media Coverage of the Death and Mistreatment of Trans Women in ICE Detention Facilitiesby April Carrillo, PhDChapter 19: Conclusion by Carrie Buist, Danielle Slakoff, and Abbie Goldberg
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