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[ecrea] Northern Lights 2011, vol 9
Thu Nov 17 10:23:37 GMT 2011
Media & Crime – Fiction and Journalism
Northern Lights, volume 9, Intellect journals 2011
Volume editors: Gunhild Agger and Anne Marit Waade; Journal editor: Stig
Hjarvard
Crime is the central theme of a vast array of fiction in books, films,
TV series, computer games and web-based interactivity. Crime is also one
of the most popular subjects of journalism, mediated in newspapers and
their websites, electronic media and on the web, where websites
dedicated to the mediation of crime are abundant.
This represents a challenge for interdisciplinary research. The aim of
the articles in the 2011 issue of Northern Lights is to highlight
questions relating to the latest developments in the highly complex
relationship between media and crime, fiction and journalism, by drawing
on experiences and cases from different contexts. The articles represent
a growing interdisciplinary and international academic interest in crime
fiction, crime journalism and crime series productions in relation to
global market conditions. The articles encompass cross-disciplinary
perspectives that traverse histories and cultures, media and media
practices.
Contents
Introduction: Gunhild Agger and Anne Marit Waade
Anne Marit Waade, Aarhus University: Crime scenes: Conceptualizing Ystad
as location in the Swedish and the British BBC Wallander crime series
Maloe Sniekers and Stijn Reijnders, Erasmus University Rotterdam:
Imprisoned by Dutroux: An ethnography of guilty houses in Belgium
Palle Schantz Lauridsen, University of Copenhagen: The making of a
popular hero: Sherlock Holmes in early Danish media culture
Kim Toft Hansen, Aalborg University: Chinese court case fiction: A
corrective for the history of crime fiction
Charlotte Beyer, University of Gloucestershire: Mediatization and
mothers accused of murder in Sophie Hannah’s crime novel A Room Swept White
Daniel Brodén, University of Gothenburg: The dark ambivalences of the
Welfare State: Investigating the transformations of the Swedish crime film
Gunhild Agger, Aalborg University: Emotion, gender and genre:
Investigating The Killing Kathrin Rothemund, Leuphana Universität
Lüneburg: Facing complex crime: Investigating contemporary German crime
fiction on television
Torben Grodal, University of Copenhagen: Crime fiction and moral
emotions: How context lures the moral attitudes of viewers and readers
Anker Brink Lund and Henrik Jensen, Copenhagen Business School:
Continuity and change in mass-mediated crime coverage: Content analyses
of newspapers, television, and web media
Ulrik Lehrmann, University of Southern Denmark: Tabloid crime
journalism: Writing on the edge of existence
Karin Ljuslinder, Umeå University, Lisbeth Morlandstø, University of
Nordland, Bodø and Jurga Mataityte-Dirziene, Vilnius University: The
victim, the wicked and the ignored: Representation of mentally ill
perpetrators of violent crime in the news reports in the Norwegian,
Swedish and Lithuanian press
///
Gunhild Agger
Professor, dr. phil.
Institut for Kultur og Globale Studier
(Dep. of Culture and Global Studies)
Aalborg Universitet
Kroghstræde 3
DK-9220 Aalborg Øst
Tlf. 9940 9029
www.krimiforsk.aau.dk
www.cgs.aau.dk
Beskrivelse:
http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/MediaManager/Image/Journal/1601829X.gif
Volume 9 Media & Crime – Fiction and Journalism
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