Index

The Emerald Handbook of Narrative Criminology

ISBN: 978-1-78769-006-6, eISBN: 978-1-78769-005-9

Publication date: 7 October 2019

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2019), "Index", Fleetwood, J., Presser, L., Sandberg, S. and Ugelvik, T. (Ed.) The Emerald Handbook of Narrative Criminology, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 493-501. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78769-005-920191001

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019 Jennifer Fleetwood, Lois Presser, Sveinung Sandberg and Thomas Ugelvik


INDEX

Absences
, 10, 11–12, 17, 411, 414–416

Active interviewing
, 93–96

Actor-network theory
, 228

Agency
, 239–257

organic agency
, 14

personal agency
, 70, 345, 361

human agency
, 167, 343

political agency
, 469

Agonistic interviews
, 93

Allegories of environmental harm
, 155, 165–167

Allegory
, 165–166

Al-Shabaab
, 27, 133, 143, 460

Analytical dialogue
, 381–384

Andrews, M.
, 65

Animating interest
, 371

Anti-jihadism
, 39

Armed conflict and war
, 4

Art
, 9, 36, 66–68, 121, 180, 197–200, 203, 207, 217

Articulating resistance
, 472, 483–486

As-salamu alaykum
, 458

As-told-to autobiography
, 135

Attentiveness
, 96, 102–103

Attorney stories
, 156–160

Australia
, 250

Autobiographical resources
, 67

Autobiographical writing
, 13, 64, 429

archived criminality reform
, 434–439

Chinese Literary Tradition
, 432–433

ideological reform
, 433–434

incarcerated Chinese
, 429–432

Autobiography

analysis in practice
, 140–145

defining
, 134–136

paratexts
, 136–140

terrorism
, 133–134

Autoethnography
, 7, 63, 68–71, 79, 420

Bad apple hypothesis
, 323

Bakhtin, M.
, 78, 136, 368, 370, 383

Becker, H.
, 2

Belgium
, 8, 90, 101

Belgian bureaucratic system
, 101

Biography
, 9, 73, 135

The Birth of Purgatory
, 218

Bourdieu, Pierre
, 3, 369

Canadian treatment programme for men
, 280

Capriccio
, 212–214

Carceral
, 5, 7, 109, 113, 122, 161, 197–216

Character
, 29, 36, 52, 54, 79, 100, 178, 181, 184, 283, 296, 329, 371, 419, 462

Chico’s visual narratives

Chico the friend
, 189–190

economic and social marginalisation
, 181

friend
, 189–190

menacing rebel
, 184–188

methamphetamine
, 180

Children’s stories
, 162–164

China
, 13, 117, 202, 427–440

Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
, 431, 433

Class

class status
, 114, 143, 265

middle-class values
, 4, 49, 79, 413, 415

social class
, 410, 415

working-class
, 75

Coding
, 12, 48, 134, 378

Collective representations
, 7, 63, 142, 163, 397, 484

Co-conspirators
, 55

Collecting stories
, 6

Colonialism. See also ‘Race’
, 16, 198, 225, 470

Compulsory Education Law of the People’s Republic of China
, 1986, 433

Confucian ideology
, 432

Constitutive perspective
, 2, 46–48, 67, 92, 104, 134, 219, 283, 410

Conversation
, 34, 35, 37, 51, 93, 95, 102, 114, 193, 282, 317, 391, 449

Convict criminology
, 63–80

Corporate offenders
, 156–160

Counterinsurgency
, 335

Counternarratives
, 7, 13, 65, 66, 103

narrative analysis
, 446–448

narrative resistance
, 450–461

power
, 446–448

resistance
, 446–448

study and participants
, 448–449

team research
, 449–450

Court case files
, 87, 89, 90

Co-victim narratives
, 265, 269, 270

Crime

crime narratives
, 389

crime-involved populations
, 110

criminality
, 131

criminological facts
, 72

drug crime
, 4

environmental crime
, 153–172

general theory
, 412–414

narrative scripts
, 2

personality disorders
, 5

proximal antecedents to
, 345

serious crimes
, 180

types
, 13

victims’ narratives
, 265–272

Crime Victims’ Rights Week programs
, 270

Criminal justice

crafting language
, 50

ethnography
, 45–47

honesty
, 52–54

impartiality
, 57–59

making evidence intelligible
, 50–52

performance
, 54–57

prosecutorial narratives
, 47–50

real-time narrative creation
, 45–47

The Trial
, 217

Criminal Justice Institutions

courts
, 16, 90, 92, 99, 243, 294, 314

police
, 5, 11, 31, 35, 39, 90, 92, 191, 131, 184, 189, 296, 321–341

prisons
, 9, 16, 65, 72, 76, 115, 197, 204, 211, 212, 297, 431

youth justice
, 5, 8, 87–108

Criminal justice professionals, attorney stories
, 156–160

Criminal law
, 309–314

Critical criminology
, 4, 66

Culture
, 3, 5, 9, 15, 28, 37, 89, 119, 136, 155, 176, 197, 217–233, 226, 271, 321–341, 346, 414, 416, 438, 463, 468

Cultural criminology
, 4, 153–172

Daya’s story
, 113–115, 119, 120, 125

Decolonial analysis
, 467–491

Deconstruction
, 200, 202, 214

Decontextualized images
, 179

Defence mechanism
, 12, 390, 395, 400, 404

Derogatory counternarratives
, 457

Dialogical narrative analysis (DNA)
, 367–385

analytical dialogue
, 381–384

animating interest
, 371

apocalyptic stories
, 377–381

definition
, 370

forms of
, 372–374

implications
, 384–385

Dictated autobiography
, 135

Discipline and Punish
, 70

Discourse
, 2, 8, 87, 111, 156, 253, 335, 416, 428, 447, 485, 486

Discourse analysis
, 8, 156, 199, 253, 410

Documentary analysis
, 179, 330

Documents

case file documents
, 101

forged signature
, 57

forgery of bank documents
, 53

legal
, 296

official documents
, 8, 27

photocopied documents
, 431

textual analysis
, 8

Dominance
, 484–486

Double consciousness
, 68

Doxastic interviews
, 94

Drugs policy war
, 383–384

Elastic narratives
, 391

Elites
, 59, 198, 420

Elite and expert interviews
, 47, 59, 93, 96

Emotions
, 32, 432, 447, 454, 455, 457

Empathy
, 28, 100–102, 178, 267, 272, 285, 288, 297

England
, 38, 203, 285, 394

Environmental crime
, 153–172

Environmental harm
, 8, 154, 155

fictionalised depictions and representations
, 160–162

Epiphany
, 33, 248, 251

Episodic narratives

offence narrative roles
, 346–357

Epistemic and doxastic modes
, 97–99

Epistemic interviews
, 93, 94, 103

Establishing trust
, 36, 449

Ethnicity. See also ‘Race’
, 72, 87, 420, 435

Ethnocentrism. See also ‘Race’
, 329

Ethnography
, 6–7, 27–43, 46, 56, 60, 68, 178, 392, 463

Existential narratives
, 35

Extremism
, 14, 133, 445–446, 461

Factual counternarratives
, 451–454, 457, 462

Faith
, 75, 79, 240, 245, 248, 250, 252, 304, 476

Feminism
, 198, 282, 468

black and African feminist theory
, 474

eco-feminist
, 208

intersectional feminism
, 473

Feminist research
, 88

interviewing
, 95–96

practice
, 93–96

Ferguson

community
, 332

effect
, 333

Ferguson Police Department (FPD)
, 332

Fiction
, 8, 59, 109, 111, 142, 155, 160, 161, 162, 166, 327, 419, 429

Figurative devices
, 12, 416, 417

First-time offender
, 124, 312, 313, 314

Formula stories
, 104, 177, 391

Football Hooliganism
, 12, 350

Frank, A. W.
, 220, 229, 367–374, 382, 384, 413

Free Association Narrative Interview (FANI)
, 390, 392

Frye, N. 343
, 344, 353, 354, 355, 357

Galli de Bibiena, Ferdinando
, 206

A General Theory of Crime
, 409, 412–414

Gender

cultural norms
, 225, 329

race. See Race

regimes imposed on women
, 65

transgender
, 109, 113, 114

women's prison
, 46

Genre
, 8, 102, 112, 123, 142–143, 146, 201, 204, 359, 376, 381, 383, 432

Germany
, 3, 11, 305, 310, 312, 314

German Youth Courts Act
, 314

Globalisation
, 14, 16, 153, 334, 467

Goffman, E.
, 2, 229

Godka
, 27, 31–36

Green criminology
, 8, 153

Green cultural criminology
, 4, 153–168

Gubrium, J.
, 28, 46

Gulliver’s Travels
, 111, 125

Habitus
, 3, 104, 369, 370, 449

Hall, S.
, 303, 305

Haunting
, 205, 206, 214, 282, 298

Harm
, 1, 2, 8, 240

power and inequality
, 15–16

self-harm
, 77

penal harm
, 87, 91–104, 153–172, 411–412

environmental harm
, 156–162

disaster
, 157

environmental harm
, 160–167

Heart of Darkness
, 70

Hegemonic narratives
, 17, 104, 411, 414, 415, 420, 469, 486

Heteroglossia
, 368, 381

Homonarrativus
, 92

Honesty
, 52–54

“How-to” bias,’ 47

Holstein, J.
, 28, 46

Humility topos
, 138

Humour
, 29, 37, 185, 190, 193, 457–460, 462

Hegemony
, 66, 414

Human Rights
, 374, 382

‘Ideal’ victimhood
, 267

Ideologies
, 322, 446, 448

Ideology
, 189, 396, 397, 429, 466

Images
, 9, 70, 175–193, 197–214, 398

Imaginative small talk
, 34, 35, 46

Impartiality
, 57–59

Implicit authority
, 267

Implicit psychological content
, 360

Imposter syndrome
, 75

Individual offenders
, 29, 78, 87, 111, 131–132, 281, 156, 283, 286, 343, 345, 347, 390, 405, 428–429

Inference rich
, 308

Institutional narratives
, 91–104

empathy
, 100–102

engagement
, 100–102

infusing insights
, 95–96

interview
, 103–104

judicial-correctional ‘truth discourse’
, 280

judicial truth
, 4

penal harm
, 91–104

police
, 92

research context and interaction
, 102–103

researching up
, 93–95

respect
, 100–102

self-narratives
, 92, 97

shifts and porous
, 97–99

Socratic interviews
, 96–97, 99–100

Institutions
, 5, 11, 16, 95, 158, 161, 298, 305, 373, 385, 427, 440, 468

Insurgency
, 335

Intersectionality
, 17, 468

Intersectional narrative criminology
, 471

Interviews/interviewing
, 7–8, 181

contextualising photographs
, 178–180

convict criminology
, 72

Dave
, 11

document studies
, 29

epistemic interviews
, 94

ethnographies
, 9

individuals accused
, 4

narrative inquiry
, 40

semi-structured dialogue
, 72, 430

Socrates Light
, 87–105

texts
, 8

ISIS
, 27, 37

Italy
, 207, 395

Jihadism
, 27, 32, 39, 41

Jihadist organisations
, 445, 454, 461

Justice

criminal justice
, 5, 70, 75, 192, 240–241, 259, 283, 289, 298, 321, 327, 385, 418, 432

Immanent Justice
, 213

social justice
, 13, 104, 467–491

storied Justice
, 45–62

youth justice
, 5, 8, 87–108

June’s story
, 244–251

practising faith
, 245–247

redemptive suffering
, 249–251

Jurors’ interpretations
, 49, 50

Katz, J.
, 2, 177, 229, 373

Labelling perspectives
, 347

Labelling theories
, 2

Labov, W.
, 371

Landscape art
, 203, 204

Law enforcement

community members
, 324

culture and officer behaviour
, 322, 323, 326

narrative methods
, 321

visual pictures
, 328

witnesses in contact
, 57

Law, legal narratives
, 5, 47, 45, 46, 59, 65, 68, 73, 78, 79, 80, 92, 110, 122, 156, 159, 198, 213, 271, 309–313, 321, 323, 325, 328, 330, 332, 378, 382, 412, 439

Lawyers
, 45, 47–49, 56, 58, 158

Lay decision-makers
, 50–52

Lies
, 8, 109–113, 125, 200, 252, 403, 455

Life as book
, 358

Life As A Film (LAAF) approach
, 11

criminal narratives
, 358–359

elicitation interview
, 359–360

explicit processes
, 360

implicit psychological content
, 360

Life event calendars (LECs)
, 113

‘Light’ Socratic dialogues
, 96–103

Loseke, D. R.
, 176

Maruna, S.
, 2, 242, 249, 279, 345, 347, 359, 390

Marxism
, 198, 214

Masculinity
, 123, 139, 227, 228, 231, 336, 379

Master plot
, 404

Material culture
, 9, 217–218

Material objects
, 223–224

Matza, D.
, 2, 390

Mauser 98K
, 220–222

McAdams, D.
, 134, 343, 344, 358–360

Melancholy dilapidation
, 197

Membership Categorisation Analysis (MCA)
, 304, 306–309

categories
, 303–304, 306–308

categorisation
, 317–318

category-bound construction
, 309–316

Dave's story
, 309–316

Memoir. See also Autobiography
, 134, 135

Metaphors
, 8, 11, 39, 213, 334, 416

Migration/migrants
, 87, 92, 100, 123, 155, 166

Mills, C. W.
, 2, 63, 64, 76, 77, 79

Motherwood, Absent Mother Syndrome
, 120, 248

Mothers Against Violence
, 242, 243, 248

Murder/homicide
, 10, 115, 250, 263, 361

Muslims
, 13, 39, 119, 144, 445–467

Narrative analysis

material culture studies
, 217–218

Mauser 98K
, 220–222

narratives
, 218–220

objects
, 218–220

Narrative convictions
, 63–83

Narrative dialogue
, 11–12

Narrative ethnography
, 7, 47, 60, 264

criminology
, 28–31

Godka
, 31–36

trust
, 36–39

Narrative habitus
, 104, 369, 370, 449

Narrative identity
, 180

Narrative labour
, 5, 71, 438, 439

Narrative resistance
, 446–447, 450–461

Narrative Role Questionnaire (NRQ)
, 11, 348, 358, 362

Narrative strategies
, 45–62

Narrative victimology. See also June’s story
, 244–246

audience
, 271–275

challenges
, 256–258

features
, 269–276

researching
, 267–268

situating
, 264–267

speaker
, 269–271

storytelling
, 263

timing
, 275–276

Nations/nationality
, 164, 224, 420, 479, 480

Neutralisations. See also Techniques of Neutralisation
, 389, 390, 405

News media
, 14, 154, 379

Norway
, 35, 217, 220, 222, 225, 446, 448, 454, 457

Objective reality
, 111

Objects
, 6, 9, 175–195, 218–220, 222–231, 304, 416

intended purpose
, 224–225

owner/user
, 226–228

own story
, 228–231

past
, 223–224

sociocultural context
, 225–226

storytelling prop
, 222–223

Observations
, 6–7, 46, 93, 95, 157, 178, 192, 263–264, 267–268

Offender Assessment System (OASys) report
, 289

Offender’s narratives

cognitive distortions
, 279

‘innocent,’ 282

judicial-correctional ‘truth

discourse,’ 280

missing victim
, 290–293

offender and victim
, 293–297

offenders and victims narratives
, 286–297

penitent offender
, 286–290

punished offender
, 290–293

real victim
, 286–290

slipperiness
, 279

stories and justice
, 297–298

victims in the prison
, 283–286

Online research

Google
, 282, 375

YouTube.com
, 375

Organisations, antisociality
, 412

Overlexicalization
, 418

Paintings
, 199, 201, 202, 208

Panini, Giovanni Paolo
, 208, 209

Paratexts
, 132

covers
, 138–140

written introductions
, 137–138

Participant observation. See also Ethnography
, 30, 45, 46, 48, 49, 60, 262, 274, 281, 295, 374

Penal harm
, 12, 91–104, 411–412

Penology
, 5

Personal narratives
, 5, 7, 79, 156, 343, 345, 471

Phatic talk
, 34

Phenomenal testimony
, 67

Philippines
, 12, 367, 374, 376, 377, 384, 385

Photo-elicitation
, 179, 190–192

Photo-elicitation interviews
, 190

Photographs
, 178–180

Phronetic approach
, 97

Pictures

dark visions
, 203–207

fascinating ruins
, 207–210

image and narrative
, 198–200

landscapes
, 200–203

sublime effects
, 211–213

visual criminology
, 194, 198

Piranesi, Giovanni Battista
, 9, 197, 205, 210, 212

Plot
, 35, 115, 166, 189, 229, 230, 293, 359, 403, 404, 446

Plurivocal narrative
, 472, 486–487

Police

police culture
, 5, 321–341

Police narratives

culture
, 321–323

development
, 323–327

growth areas
, 333–336

methodological challenges
, 333–336

popular culture
, 327–329

storytelling
, 323–327

thin blue line
, 329–331

‘truth,’ 331–333

Polkinghorne, D.
, 134

Polletta, F.
, 135, 253, 369, 373

Polyphony
, 318, 368, 381

Positivism
, 35, 52, 74, 109, 138, 180, 244, 251, 260, 264, 273, 313, 327, 335, 361, 416, 418, 429

Postcolonialism. See also ‘Race’
, 198

Poststructuralism
, 198

Power

harm
, 15–16

inequality
, 15–16

narrative analysis
, 446–448

resistance
, 446–448

social inequalities
, 12–13

Prisoner autobiography. See also Autobiographical writing
, 64–66

individual autobiography
, 427

rehabilitation
, 428–429

Prisons/prisoners
, 3, 5, 9, 16, 64–66, 72, 76, 115, 197, 204, 211, 212, 281, 297, 431

Prisoners’ narratives
, 298

Professional role
, 355, 358

Prosecutorial narratives
, 47–49

Prostitution. See also Sex work
, 291, 472, 473

Psychiatry
, 11, 309–312

Psychoanalysis
, 198

Psychological approach

Agency and Communion
, 343

Leary’s personality dimensions
, 344

moral justification
, 345–346

Psychological complexity
, 360–361

Psycho-social criminology

free association narrative interview
, 390

Gianluca’s life story
, 394–402

methods
, 393

Punishment
, 15, 67, 72, 155, 159, 162, 197, 217, 285, 292, 312, 314, 316, 361, 412, 431, 477

Quantitative analysis
, 5, 68

Rapport
, 36, 37, 55, 94, 95, 103, 264, 266, 272, 282

‘Race’. See also Ethnicity

black and African feminist theory
, 474

black perspectives
, 80

black prisoners
, 65

Caucasian youth
, 90

colonialism
, 16, 198, 225, 470

ethnocentrism
, 329

intersectional feminism
, 473

marginalized black women
, 473, 475, 483, 487, 488, 489, 490

Northern Caucasian migrants
, 89

postcolonialism
, 198

white narratives
, 80

“white pride”
, 191, 195

white prisoners
, 65

Racism
, 14, 470

Redemption
, 239–257

Reflexivity
, 63, 88, 96, 103, 270

Religion
, 13, 32, 35, 38, 248, 253, 266, 334, 446, 448, 452, 456, 479

Religious narratives. See also Redemption; Epiphanies; Faith
, 10, 14, 32, 33, 34, 35, 38, 154, 207, 240, 253, 266, 445, 446, 448, 449, 451

finding a ‘calling,’ 247–249

redemptive suffering
, 249–251

Researching up. See Active interviewing

Reissman, C. K.
, 321

Resistance
, 446–448

Respectable femininity
, 114

Revengeful mission
, 349, 351, 352, 357

Ricoeur, P.
, 80, 369, 373

Roles, categorisations
, 10–11

Self-categorisation
, 313, 314, 316

Self-help groups
, 262, 266, 267, 269, 270

Sex Offender Treatment Programme facilitators (SOTP)
, 287

Sexualities
, 122, 420, 477, 479, 480

Sex Workers Education and Advocacy Taskforce (SWEAT)
, 472, 473

Sex work
, 115, 123, 467–491

decolonising/rehumanising research
, 467–468

intersectional agenda
, 469–471

Shameful identities
, 479–482

Side grip
, 230

Silences
, 11, 16, 35, 414

Silencing
, 419–420

Social harm
, 105

Socio-narratology
, 12, 368–374, 385

Socrates light
, 87–105

Socratic dialogues
, 88, 96–97

Socratic interviews
, 99–100

South Africa
, 13, 15, 467, 472, 473, 486, 487

Sri Lanka
, 109, 113–115, 117, 119, 121–123

Stigmatised identities
, 479–482

The State
, 10, 16, 78, 94, 159, 164, 213, 295, 352, 482

Street culture
, 32, 35, 36, 37, 40, 401

Storytelling
, 15, 28, 36–39, 177, 222–223, 232, 243

Structures of feeling
, 71

Subculture
, 11, 32, 119, 334

Sublime effects
, 211–213

Subtext
, 416–417

Superpredators
, 412

Symbolic boundaries
, 177

Symbolic interactionism
, 2, 261, 347, 412

Symbolic interactionist
, 92, 261, 346

Team research
, 449–450

Techniques of neutralisation
, 2, 390

Television
, 283, 328, 329, 416

Terrorism
, 133–134

Terrorist autobiographies
, 134

Testimony
, 49, 54, 57, 60, 67, 253, 295

Thin blue line
, 329–331

The Three Little Pigs
, 155, 166, 167

Toch, H.
, 344, 359

Tragic hero role
, 353, 354, 357

Translation
, 122, 201, 252

Trauma narratives
, 241

Travelling stories
, 14–15

Trial narratives
, 47, 48, 213

Trust
, 36, 41, 52, 100, 266, 333, 439

Truth
, 4, 8, 35, 57, 63–64, 109–113, 115–120, 223, 248, 397, 331–333

Truth/lies
, 35, 109–113

factural truths
, 35

slants on truth
, 63–64

Ugelvik family Mauser
, 221, 222

UK
, 10, 15, 64, 66, 67, 74, 250, 271, 273, 438

Understatement
, 58, 417–418

Unsaid
, 12, 409–424

USA
, 428

US federal prosecutors
, 45–61

Validity
, 110, 125

Verisimilitude
, 112, 120–122

Victim impact statements
, 243, 262, 263

Victimhood
, 9, 240, 251, 254, 261, 267, 447, 478

Victimology. See Narrative victimology

Victims
, 4, 10, 58, 124, 158, 239–257, 259, 261, 263, 264, 265–272, 279–300, 382, 402, 455

Victim stories

June’s story
, 240, 244–251

lethal violence
, 240, 241, 242–244

Violence
, 3, 4, 39, 79, 121, 139, 161, 180, 240, 241, 242–244, 270, 308, 392, 393, 400

atrocity
, 4

conceptual violence
, 202

finding a ‘Calling’ in the aftermath
, 247–249

gun violence
, 265

Jihadi organisations
, 451

mass violence
, 4

mothers against violence
, 244

political violence
, 142

redemptive suffering
, 240, 249–251

visual symbols
, 139

Visual criminology
, 3, 198, 214

Visual narratives
, 9, 180–190

Vocabularies of motive
, 2

War/armed conflict
, 4, 12, 13, 115, 139, 184, 220, 447–448, 451, 453

War stories
, 325, 334, 335, 376

Whimsical fantasises
, 208

Youth justice
, 89–108

YouTube.com
, 375

Prelims
1 Introduction
Part I: Collecting Stories
Observations and Fieldwork
2 Narrative Ethnography under Pressure: Researching Storytelling on the Street
3 Storied Justice: The Narrative Strategies of US Federal Prosecutors
4 Narrative Convictions, Conviction Narratives: the prospects of convict criminology
Interviews
5 Reflections after ‘Socrates Light’: Eliciting and Countering Narratives of Youth Justice Officials
6 Stories that Are Skyscraper Tall: The Place of ‘Tall Tales’ in Narrative Criminology
Texts
7 By Terrorists' Own Telling: Using Autobiography for Narrative Criminological Research
8 Stories of Environmental Crime, Harm and Protection: Narrative Criminology and Green Cultural Criminology
Beyond ‘Texts’: Images and Objects
9 The Stories in Images: The Value of the Visual for Narrative Criminology
10 Reading Pictures: Piranesi and Carceral Landscapes
11 The Tales Things Tell: Narrative Analysis, Materiality and my Wife's Old Nazi Rifle
Part II: Analysing Stories
Studying the Victim
12 Excavating Victim Stories: Making Sense of Agency, Suffering and Redemption
13 Narrative Victimology: Speaker, Audience, Timing
14 Finding Victims in the Narratives of Men Imprisoned for Sex Offences
Categorisations, Plots and Roles
15 Narratives of Conviction and the Re-storying of ‘Offenders’
16 Police Narratives as Allegories that Shape Police Culture and Behaviour
17 Revealing Criminal Narratives: The Narrative Roles Questionnaire and the Life as a Film Procedure
Narrative Dialogue, The Unconscious and Absences
18 Doing Dialogical Narrative Analysis: Implications for Narrative Criminology
19 ‘Protecting and Defending Mummy’: Narrative Criminology and Psychosocial Criminology
20 The Story of Antisociality: Determining What Goes Unsaid in Dominant Narratives
Connecting Stories, Power and Social Inequalities
21 The Archived Criminal: Mandatory Prisoner Autobiography in China
22 Opposing Violent Extremism through Counternarratives: Four Forms of Narrative Resistance
23 Researching Sex Work: Doing Decolonial, Intersectional Narrative Analysis
Index