Crimimologia Cultural
Vistas: 133Palabras clave:
Controle, Edgework, Etnografia, Significado, Transgressão, PoderResumen
A Criminologia Cultural está preocupada com a convergência dos processos culturais, criminais e de controle do crime; como tal, situa a criminalidade e seu controle no contexto da dinâmica cultural e da produção contestada de significado. Ela procura entender as realidades cotidianas de um mundo profundamente desigual e injusto, e destacar as maneiras pelas quais o poder é exercido e resistido em meio à interação de criação de regras, violação de regras e representação. As temáticas da Criminologia Cultural envolvem uma série de questões contemporâneas: a construção mediada e a mercantilização do crime, violência e punição; as práticas simbólicas daqueles envolvidos em atividades subculturais ou pós-subculturais ilícitas; as ansiedades existenciais e emoções situadas que animam o crime, a transgressão e a vitimização; os controles sociais e significados culturais que circulam dentro e entre arranjos espaciais; a interação entre controle estatal e resistência cultural; as culturas criminógenas geradas pelas economias de mercado; e uma série de outras instâncias em que o significado situado e simbólico está em jogo. Para realizar tais análises, a Criminologia Cultural abraça perspectivas interdisciplinares e métodos alternativos que regularmente a movem além dos limites da Criminologia convencional, extraindo da antropologia, estudos de mídia, estudos da juventude, estudos culturais, geografia cultural, sociologia, filosofia e outras disciplinas, e utilizando novas formas de etnografia, análise textual e produção visual. Em tudo isso, a Criminologia Cultural procura desafiar os parâmetros aceitos da análise criminológica e reorientar a criminologia para as condições sociais, culturais e econômicas contemporâneas.
Descargas
Citas
Aiello, M F (2014) ‘Policing the masculine frontier: cultural criminological analysis of the gendered performance of policing’, Crime, Media, Culture, 10(1)59-79.
Altheide, D (1996) Qualitative Media Analysis. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.
Appadurai, A (1996) Modernity at Large, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press
Bailey, F. Y., & Hale, D. C. (1998). Popular culture, crime, and justice. Wadsworth Publishing Company.
Becker, H. (1963) Outsiders: Studies in the Sociology of Deviance, New York: Free Press
Brisman, A and South, N (2014) Green Cultural Criminology, London: Routledge.
Brotherton, D. (2004), ‘What happened to the pathological gang?’, J. Ferrell, et al (eds), Cultural Criminology Unleashed, London: GlassHouse
Brown, Michelle and Eamonn Carrabine, eds, (2017). The Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminology. London: Routledge, forthcoming.
Burrows, Dan. (2013). ‘Framing the Iraq War’, PhD thesis, University of Kent.
Cunneen, Chris. (2010). ‘Framing the crimes of colonialism’, in Keith Hayward and Mikelex Presdee (eds) Framing Crime, London: Routledge.
Denzin, N. K. (1992) Symbolic Interaction and Cultural Studies: The Politics of Interpretation, Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.
Denzin, N. K. (1997) Interpretive Ethnography, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Dunier, M, (1999) Sidewalk, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Fenwick, M and Hayward, K.J (2000) ‘Youth crime, excitement and consumer culture’, in J. Pickford (ed.) Youth Justice, London: Cavendish.
Ferrell, J (1996) Crimes of Style. Boston: Northeastern University Press.
Ferrell, J (1997) ‘Criminological Verstehen: Inside the Immediacy of Crime’ Justice Quarterly 14(1) 3-23
Ferrell, J (1999), ‘Cultural Criminology’, Annual Review of Sociology, 25: 395–418.
Ferrell, J (2001) Tearing Down the Streets. New York: Palgrave/MacMillan.
Ferrell, Jeff. (2004b). ‘Speed kills’, in Ferrell, Jeff, Hayward, Keith Morrison, Wayne and Presdee, Mike (eds) Cultural Criminology Unleashed, London: GlassHouse.
Ferrell J (2006) Empire of Scrounge. New York: New York University Press.
Ferrell, Jeff. (2012a). ‘Outline of a Criminology of Drift’ in Steve Hall and Simon Winlow, editors, New Directions in Criminological Theory. London: Routledge/Wilan.
Ferrell, Jeff (2018) Drift, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, forthcoming.
Ferrell, J and Hamm, M, 1998, ‘True Confessions: Crime, Deviance and Field Research’, in J Ferrell and M Hamm (eds) Ethnography on the Edge. Boston: Northeastern University Press.
Ferrell J and M S Hamm, eds. (1998) Ethnography at the Edge. Boston: Northeastern University Press.
Ferrell, J. and Hayward, K (Eds.). (2011). Cultural Criminology: Theories of Crime. Ashgate.
Ferrell, Jeff, Keith Hayward, and Jock Young. (2008). Cultural Criminology: An Invitation. London: Sage.
Ferrell, Jeff, Keith Hayward, and Jock Young. (2015). Cultural Criminology: An Invitation, 2nd ed. London: Sage.
Ferrell, J Hayward, K, Morrison, W and Presdee, P, eds. (2004) Cultural Criminology Unleashed, London: GlassHouse
Ferrell, J., & Ilan, J. (2013). ‘Crime, culture, and everyday life’ in C. Hale, K. Hayward, A. Wahidin, and E. Wincup (eds) Criminology, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Ferrell, J and Sanders, C. (eds) (1995), Cultural Criminology, Boston: Northeastern University Press.
Fonow, M. and Cook, J. (1991) Beyond Methodology: Feminist Scholarship as Lived Research, Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
Garot, Robert. (2010). Who You Claim. New York: New York University Press.
Hall, Stuart, Chas Critcher, Tony Jefferson, John Clarke, and Brian Roberts. (2013). Policing the Crisis, 35th Anniversary Ed. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Hamm, Mark. (2007). High crimes and misdemeanours: George W. Bush and the sins of Abu Ghraib’, Crime, Media, Culture, 3(3)259-84.
Hayward, Keith J. (2004). City Limits: Crime, Consumer Culture and the Urban Experience, London: GlassHouse.
Hayward, K (2011) ‘The critical terrorism studies: cultural criminology nexus’, Critical Studies on Terrorism, 4(1)57–73.
Hayward Keith J. (2012). Five spaces of cultural criminology. British Journal of Criminology 52(3): 441–462.
Hayward, K J (2017b) ‘Documentary criminology: a cultural criminological introduction’, in M. Brown and E. Carrabine (eds) The Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminology. London: Routledge.
Hayward, K J (2017b) Cultural Criminology, Critical Concepts in Criminology, London: Routledge.
____ and Hobbs, D, (2007) ‘Beyond the binge in Booze Britain: market-led liminalization and the spectacle of binge drinking’ British Journal of Sociology 58: 3 437-456.
____ and and Kindynis, T (2013), ‘Crime-Consumerism nexus’, in J. Ross (ed.) Encyclopedia of Street Crime in America, Thousand Oaks: Sage.
____ and Presdee, M (2010) Framing Crime: Cultural Criminology and the Image, London: Routledge.
____ and Smith, O (2017 ) ‘Crime and consumer culture’ in A. Liebling, S. Maruna, and L. McAra (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Criminology, 6th Edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
____ and Yar, M (2006) ‘The ‘Chav’ phenomenon: consumption, media and the construction of a new underclass’, Crime, Media, Culture, 2: 1 pp 9-28.
—— and Young, J. (eds) (2004), Special Edition on Cultural Criminology, Theoretical Criminology, 8(3).
Ilan, Jonathan. (2011). ‘Reclaiming respectability?: the cross-cultural dynamics of crime, community and governance in inner-city Dublin’, Urban Studies, 48 1137-1155.
Ilan, J. (2015) Understanding Street Culture Poverty, Crime, Youth and Cool. Palgrave Macmillan.
Kane, S (2012) Where Rivers Meet the Sea, Philadelphia, Temple University Press.
Klein, Joshua. (2011). ‘Toward a cultural criminology of war’, Social Justice, 38(3) 86–103.
Jenkins, Phillip. (1999). ‘Fighting Terrorism as if Women Mattered,’ in Jeff Ferrell and Neil Websdale, eds., Making Trouble. New York: Aldine.Kane, S (2004) ‘The unconventional methods of cultural criminology’ Theoretical Criminology 8(3): 303-21.
Katz, J. (1988), Seductions of Crime, New York: Basic Books.
Kindynis, T (2014) ‘Ripping up the map: criminology and cartography revisited’, British Journal of Criminology, 54 (2) 222-243.
Kozinets, R. V (2010) Netnography, London: Sage
Kraska, Peter. (1998). ‘Enjoying militarism: Political/personal dilemmas in studying U.S. police paramilitary units. In: Ferrell, Jeff and Hamm, Mark (eds) Ethnography at the Edge. Boston, MA, Northeastern University Press.
Linnemann, Travis, Wall, Tyler, and Green, Edward. (2014). ‘The walking dead and the killing state: zombification and the normalization of police violence’, Theoretical Criminology, 18(4) 506-27.
Lyng, S. (1990), ‘Edgework: A Social Psychological Analysis of Voluntary Risk-Taking’, American Journal of Sociology, 95(4): 876–921.
Lyng, S. (Ed) (2005) Edgework. New York: Routledge.
Matallana-Villareal, J (2010) Equidad Espacial En El Acceso a La Educacion Inicial En Bogotá, Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes.
Mills, C W (1940) ‘Situated actions and vocabularies of motive’ American Sociological Review 5(6): 9004-13.
Miller, J (2008) Getting Played: African American Girls, Urban Inequality, and Gendered Violence, New York: New York University Press.
Morrison, Wayne. (2004). ‘Reflections with memories: everyday photography capturing genocide’, Theoretical Criminology, 8(3)341-58.
Morrison, Wayne. (2006). Criminology, Civilization and the New World Order, London: GlassHouse.
Muzzatti, S L (2010) “Consumer Culture, Criminology and the Politics of Exclusion” in M Maguire and D Okada (eds.) Critical Issues of Crime and Justice: Thought, Policy and Practice. Thousand Oaks: Sage. pp 119-131.
Naegler, L and Salman, S (2016) ‘Cultural criminology and gender consciousness’, Feminist Criminology, 11 (4) 354-374.
Nightingale, C (1993) On the Edge, New York: NY: Basic Books.
O’Malley, P., and Mugford, S. (1994), ‘Crime, excitement and modernity’, in G. Barak (ed.), Varieties of Criminology, Westport, Conn.: Praeger.
O’Neill, M, Woods, P. and Webster, M (2004) ‘New Arrivals: participatory action research, imagined communities and ‘visions of social justice’ Social Justice 32 (1) 75-89.
Polsky, N. (1969) Hustlers, Beats and Others, Garden City, NY: Anchor
Presdee, M. (2000), Cultural Criminology and the Carnival of Crime, London: Routledge.
Presdee, Mike. (2009). ‘Volume crime and everyday life’, in Hale, Chris, Hayward, Keith, Wahidin, Azrini and Wincup, Emma (eds) Criminology, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Presser, L. (2009). The narratives of offenders. Theoretical Criminology, 13(2), 177-200.
Presser, L., & Sandberg, S. (Eds.). (2015). Narrative criminology: Understanding stories of crime. NYU Press.
Rajah, V (2007) ‘Resistance as edgework in violent intimate relationships of drug-involved women’, British Journal of Criminology, 47(2) 196-213.
Raymen, Thomas. (2016). ‘Designing-in crime by designing-out the social?: situational crime prevention and the intensification of harmful subjectivities’. British Journal of Criminology, Forthcoming.
Redmon, D (2015a) ‘Documentary criminology: expanding the criminological imagination with ‘Mardis Gras – Made in China’ as a case study’, Societies, 5 (2) 425-441.
Redmon, D (2015b) Beads, Bodies and Trash, London: Routledge.
Redmon, D (2016) ‘Documentary criminology: Girl Model as a case study’, Crime, Media, Culture, Forthcoming.
Root, C Ferrell, J and Palacious, W (2013) ‘Brutal serendipity: criminological verstehen and victimization’, Critical Criminology, 21(2)141-55.
Sandberg, S. (2010) ‘What can ‘lies’ tell us about life? Notes towards a framework of narrative criminology’, Journal of Criminal Justice Education. 21 (4) 447–465.
Sandberg, S. and Ugelvik, T (2016) ‘Why do offenders tape their crimes?: crime and punishment in the age of the selfie’, British Journal of Criminology, Forthcoming.
Schuurman, N (2009) ‘Metadata as a site for imbuing GIS with qualitative information’, in M. Cope and S. Elwood (eds) Qualitative GIS, London: Sage.
Smith, O and Raymen, T (2016) ‘Deviant leisure: a criminological perspective’, Theoretical Criminology, Forthcoming.
Wall, Tyler and Linnemann, Travis. (2014a). ‘Accumulating atrocities: capital, state killing and the cultural life of the dead’, in Dawn Roethe and Dave Kauzlarich (eds) Towards a Victimology of State Crime, New York: Routledge.
Wall, Tyler and Linnemann, Travis. (2014b). ‘Staring down the state: police power, visual economies, and the ‘War on Cameras’’, Crime, Media, Culture, 10(2) 133-49.
Wender, Jonathan. (2004). ‘Phenomenology, cultural criminology and the return to astonishment’, in Jeff Ferrell,Keith Hayward, Wayne, Morrison, and Mike Presdee (eds) Cultural Criminology Unleashed, London: Cavendish.
Wender, Jonathan. (2008). Policing and the Politics of Everyday Life, Champaign: University of Illinois Press.
Willis, P (1977) Learning to Labour, Aldershot: Gower
Young, Alison. (2004). Judging the Image, London: Routledge.
Young, A. (2009). The scene of violence: Cinema, crime, affect. Routledge.
Young, Alison. (2010). ‘The scene of the crime: is there such a thing as just looking?’ in Keith Hayward and Mike Presdee (eds) Framing Crime: Cultural Criminology and the Image, London: GlassHouse.
Young, J (2003) ‘Merton with energy, Katz with structure: the sociology of vindictiveness and the criminology of transgression’ Theoretical Criminology 7(3): 389-414.
Young, J (1999) The Exclusive Society. London: Sage.
Young, Jock. (2011). The Criminological Imagination. Cambridge: Polity.
Descargas
Publicado
Cómo citar
Número
Sección
Licencia
Os direitos autorais dos artigos publicados são do autor, com direitos do periódico sobre a primeira publicação.
Os autores somente poderão utilizar os mesmos resultados em outras publicações indicando claramente este periódico como o meio da publicação original. Se não houver tal indicação, considerar-se-á situação de autoplágio.
Portanto, a reprodução, total ou parcial, dos artigos aqui publicados fica sujeita à expressa menção da procedência de sua publicação neste periódico, citando-se o volume e o número dessa publicação. Para efeitos legais, deve ser consignada a fonte de publicação original.