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[Commlist] CFP Murder and True Crime Conference
Wed Jan 15 22:27:41 GMT 2020
*Update: *please see the below Call for Papers for updates on the
/Murder and True Crime in the Media /conference, including further
details of our keynote presenters, and our conference website. This
conference is now _free_to attend and selected proceeding will be
published in an edited collection. *The closing date for abstracts is
**_Friday 14th Februar__y_*(please email abstracts to
(maria.mellins /at/ stmarys.ac.uk))
*
CFP: Murder and True Crime in the Media*
Proposals are invited for an interdisciplinary conference at St
Mary’s University, Twickenham on *_Friday 29_**_th May 2020._*
Book your free place on our conference website:
https://www.stmarys.ac.uk/events/2020/05/true-crime-in-the-media
/New Confirmed Keynotes/
*Dr Sarah Moore*'s research is concerned with gender and risk, she has
published work on media representation of date rape and student beliefs
concerning drug-facilitated sexual assault. Sarah is the author of
/Crime and the Media /(2014, Palgrave Macmillan)
***Dr Jane Monckton-Smith* has published on interpersonal violence,
stalking, coercive control, domestic abuse and homicide prevention. Jane
is also the author of the Homicide Timeline - the 8 stages.
/About the Conference /
Modern audiences demonstrate an appetite for true crime,
and particularly stories that involve murder. Whilst public fascination
for true crime is not /new/, the genre has long dominated our
entertainment industries, from biopics, whodunnits, to gangster
films; interest in true crime is certainly /renewed/. One reason
for the resurgence of popularity for true crime is Industrial. There is
a recent influx of new content available. /Making a Murderer/ can be
viewed through the lens of Netflix and binge-watching, Sarah Koenig’s
/Serial/ is closely linked to an increase in podcast listeners.
/Extremely Wicked, Shocking Evil, and Vile/ and /Mindhunter/ both
demonstrate the draw for well-known stars (such as Zac Efron) and
personnel (David Fincher) to this genre.
Where there is scheduling, there is also a market. The people that
‘demand’ on demand. Therefore, alongside these industrial contexts,
there are a number of wider factors involved in the surge of murder
content. Violent crimes, particularly murder, have ideal narrative
structures with a ready-made story arc, ‘social order is disrupted by a
deviant act, the guilty are sought and generally identified, and,
finally, justice is done or thwarted’ (Auden in Moore, 2014: 177). They
are enigma narratives that compel audiences to binge-watch the
investigation so that they may finally achieve satisfaction in the form
of closure. Some narratives are exoneration tales, using documentary as
trial spaces that jurify the public (Bruzzi, 2016), others provide us
with an opportunity to experience fear in a
safe environment. David Altheide’s (2002) work on fear and the news and
Ulrich Beck’s (1992) on /Risk Society/ demonstrates how a perceived lack
of control over our lives has led to a preoccupation with safety and risk.
Through the consideration of murder in the press, documentaries,
films and novels, this conference will interrogate the
different representations of true crime and how these can contribute
to important debates in contemporary culture and society. For
instance, can analysis into victims shed light on the way that social
groups are constructed in the media, and whether there is a process
of selection occurring? How can the study of murder cases provide
further insight into coercive control? How might
the representations of crimes vary, from knife crime, organised
crime, to the glamorisation or even celebrification of some serial
killers?What are the ethical considerations when producing murder
content and how do platforms such as podcasts and YouTube, pose issues
of regulation?
Papers are invited from a broad range of disciplines including Media,
Film, Criminology, Sociology, Law. Some focal points include (but are
not limited to)
·The victims and/or survivors of murder
·Serial killers and/or mass murderers in the media
·Organised crime and human trafficking
·Murder in the news
·Policing and the murder investigation
·Domestic violence
·Coercive control
·True Crime trials – the use of documentary and podcasts as an
alternative ‘trial space’ to either exonerate the falsely accused or
announce culprits (and negotiations in-between)
·The platforms and technologies of true crime -
Netflix, podcasts, YouTube, crime binge-watching (extending to issues of
regulation)
·The ethical considerations involved in murder themed productivity
·Negotiating risk and fear in true crime
·Cultivation theory
/Abstracts/
Please submit a maximum 500-word abstract by
*Friday 14**th February**2020* to Dr Maria Mellins,
(maria.mellins /at/ stmarys.ac.uk) <mailto:(maria.mellins /at/ stmarys.ac.uk)>
St Mary’s University, Waldegrave Road, Strawberry Hill, Twickenham. TW1 4SX.
For directions to St Mary’s and further information, please see our website
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