аспекты серийных убийц с сарказмом и юмором это грех
аспекты серийных убийц с сарказмом и юмором
Университет штата Юта
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Убийцы Fandoms Crime-Tracking & Identity в истинном преступлении
Сообщество
Наоми Барнс
Utah State UniveSity
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Убийцы финдомы
Преступление - отключение и личность в настоящем сообществе преступности
к
Наоми Барнс
Тезис, представленный в частичном исполнении
требований к степени
из
МАГИСТР
в
Американские исследования-фольклор
Одобренный:
______________________ ______________________
Линн С. Макнелль Джинни Томас
Основным членом Комитета профессора
______________________
Стивен Ванжем
Член комитета
Университет штата Юта
Логан, штат Юта
2015.
II
Copyright © Naomie Barnes 2015
Все права защищены
III.
Благодарность
Я хотел бы поблагодарить доктора Линне Макнил за бесконечную поддержку во время моего
исследовать. Не только была ее помощь бесценной при работе через исходный материал, ее
Мудрость и руководство помогло мне перемещаться по сложному предмету с пониманием
и открытый разум. Спасибо, что не достаточно, Линн.
Я также хотел бы поблагодарить членов моего комитета, доктора Жанни Томаса и доктора
Стивен Ванжем. Джинни, ваша работа - вдохновение, и я так благодарен, что вы были
Готов познакомить меня в мир легендов. Стивен, спасибо за принося
Криминила к столу - это углубило мое понимание и приняло решение нового
уровень.
Я не мог сделать это через всю борьбу и вторую догадки без
Любовь и поддержка моих друзей и семьи. Спасибо за ваше понимание и за
Вставив моим необычным проектом.
Наконец, спасибо членам настоящего сообщества преступности, которые взяли
время ответить на вопросы, принимать обзоры и преподавать фольклорист и ауты их
Мир. Ваше понимание было бесценным.
лишенный
Запусковое предупреждение
В этой статье рассматриваются тема серийных убийц и массовых убийц. Хотя
Конкретные детали различных преступлений не обсуждаются долго, пожалуйста, возьмите
Меры предосторожности, поскольку предмет может беспокоить некоторое.
внимание
Рис. 1. Изображение любезно предоставлено богатым Хилленом младшим (Richhillenjr.wordpress.com)
Большинство из нас интересуются субъектом, не «любят серийных убийц» или намерены
сенсация субъекта. Мы заинтересованы в интеллектуальном и психологическом
аспекты серийных убийц. Я приближаюсь к этому с сарказмом и юмором в своем искусстве и
Писания.
- Rich Hillen Jr., создатель неофициальной серийной колоннической книги окраски и активности
6.
ВступлениеВо время испытания убийств в 1979 году Ted Bundy в Майами, Флориде, «устойчивом и необычном
Строка зрителей "заполнила зал суда и выстроилась на улице (" Ted Bundy Guyties "
1979). Новости Барабаны из испытания показывают, что эти зрители были молодыми женщинами вокруг
Один в том же возрасте, что и два сестра сестры ороретия, были обвинены в убийстве в год раньше.
Хотя некоторые женщины признались, что боятся или бесполезны Банди, они также
признался, что они были очарованы им, даже если они не были уверены в том, почему. Похожий
Случаи притяжения к зрелище, окруженному серийным и массовым убийцам.
такие как Джеффри Даммер, Чарльз Мэнсон, Ричард Рамирес, Дилан Клебольд и Эрик
Харрис, Деннис Рассея, Эд Гейн, Джон Уэйн Гейси, Х. Х. Холмс и многие другие
На протяжении веков (SCHMID 2005; Левин и Фокс 1985; P. Jenkins 1994) .1
Это же узор из очарования - от мужчин, так и женских зрителей
Продолжается в более поздних испытаниях для массовых убийц, таких как Tj Lane, крыша Диланна, Джеймс Э.
Холмс, а другие.2 как маловероятно, насколько это возможно, «преступление больше не является баром к знаменитости;
Действительно, он так же близок к гарантии знаменитостей как на можно найти «(SCHMID 2005, 10). Их
Поверхночные убийства сопровождаются группами людей очарованными этими преступниками,
жертвы и судебные дела - много раз долго после того, как преступник был заключен в тюрьму или
покойный. Те, кто предпочитают следовать за случаями, окружающими эти убийства, часто часто
вентиляторы, помечены как серийные убийцы или массовые убийства ".
Роберт Козинец (2001) объясняет, что «фанаты» являются более чем случайными наблюдателями: они
Ищите информацию о предмете, взаимодействуйте друг с другом для обсуждения интересов в Интернете
Форумы, участвующие в мероприятиях, влияющих на их выбранный интерес, создать вентилятор искусства и вентилятора
выдумка и посещение конвенций. Фанаты, которые создают группы, посвященные их интересам,
7.
как правило, называют «фендомыми», которые Henry Jenkins (2010) описывает как имеющие
«Социальные структуры и культурные практики, созданные самым страстно вовлеченным
Потребители средств массовой информации »(1). Некоторые из самых узнаваемых фандомов сосредоточиться
На телевизорных шоу, таких как Star Trek, Баффи Убийца вампира или доктор, который; литературный
такие работы, как Шерлок Холмс короткие истории или владелец колец; или на конкретных
Знаменитости, такие как музыканты, художники или звезды кино. Фандомы часто встречаются онлайн в чате
комнаты, участвуйте в форумах, создайте фанфорт или вентилятор, а иногда встречаются лично в
Конвенции как разнообразные в теме как сами группы. Во многих отношениях субкультуры
фандомов "представляют Fallout из общества, который способствует красивой команде
Jock и Barbie Images за счет ... Разные "(KOzinets 2001, 73) и дают
Те, кто был бы назван странным или социально неловким местом, чтобы чувствовать себя добро пожаловать. То
Культура и традиции, поделенные в каждой из этих групп, часто являются «другими» и
стигматизирован как девиантный или ненормальный посторонние, хотя много раз, что такое фендем
Акции отражают большие социальные тревоги и страхи. Один главный страх или беспокойство, конечно,
окружает смерть и табу убийства.
Согласно симпозиуму серийного убийства ФБР, последовательные убийства являются «
незаконное убийство двух или более жертв того же преступника (ы), в отдельных событиях »
(Morton и Hilts 2008, 9). Серийные убийцы, то те, кто совершает такие убийства, часто
В серии событий, разделенных охлаждением периодов. Массовые убийства, с другой стороны,
являются «ряд убийств (четырех или более), происходящих во время одного и того же инцидента, без
Отличительный период между убийствами. Эти события обычно включали один
Расположение, где убийца убила ряд жертв в постоянном инциденте «(8). В
последние несколько десятилетий, казалось бы, очевидное увеличение этих типов убийств имеет
8.
Доминирует в новостях, с акцентом размещены на тех, которые являются более ужасными или шокирующими.
Это все вопрос восприятия, однако, как Дэвид Шмид (2005) указывает, что
История была распространена с убийцами, а также те, кто использовал этих преступников к
Комментарий к обществу общества (13).Чтобы понять, почему многие верят на серийные и массовые убийства, чтобы быть новым
Феномен, важно проверить, как информация об этих конкретных типах
Преступления распространяются на публику. Schmid (2005) обсуждает, как ФБР был изначально
не заинтересованы в случаях, когда многие убийства были совершены тем же убийцей. То
Бюро, безусловно, знал и изучал серийные убийства, но до прессы
Конференция, проводимая 26 октября 1983 года, они никогда не делали официальной декларации о интересах
в эти преступления (77). Он также указывает, что до того времени, что широкая публика не была
обязательно осознавать эти типы последовательных убийств; термин «серийный убийца» не был частью
американец навесной. Как таковой, ФБР смог создать последовательный убийцевый образ это
Предпочтительнее: сексуально девиантный мужчина, который бродил в Соединенные Штаты, ищет случайных
жертвы (78-81). Это преувеличенное изображение, однако, было «полезно для федерального закона
исполнение в качестве акцента на мобильности и половой убийстве [достигнута] его цель
Увеличение ресурсов и мощности »(83). Взяв мир серийных убийц и
напугая общественность в полагать сотни серийных убийц, роумировали страну,
ФБР гарантировало свою позицию власти в таких случаях, и гарантированное федеральное финансирование
будет продолжать течь в бюро. Величайший инструмент в их распоряжении был новостями
СМИ.
Новости СМИ выносятся зарабатывать деньги «представление новостей, которые привлекают большие
Аудитория, которая, в свою очередь, привлекает более рекламные доллары »(Duwe 2000, 364).
9.
Соответственно, увеличенный государственный страх, созданный вновь созданным ФБР, роуминговым сериалом
Убийцы создали ситуацию, которая не только выиграла ФБР, это также было выгодно
Вещательные компании, создавая историю, от которой публика не могла отключить. То
Поэтому повышение серийного убийца в 1980-х и 1990-х годах, следовательно, стал ценным источником
доход. Одинаково, как рост серийного убийцы создал власть и прибыль для новостей
СМИ, так что тоже рост массового убийцы. Грант Дувей (2000) объясняет, что «HighProfile
дел приносит большой интерес и беспокойство, предоставляя журналистам и
Источники ... с возможностью сделать претензиями о новых или повторяющихся проблемах преступности »
(367-368). Опять же, отчетность преувеличенных деталей о насильственном массовом убийстве - это способ
Держите публику, участвующие в постоянной истории смерти, которая становится «развлекательным и
Таким образом, более привлекательным для потребителей ... потому что они драматические, трагические и редкие в
возникновение »(365). В обоих экземплярах (серийных и массовых убийств), новостные розетки прибыли
изображая крайнее насилие редких случаев.
Массовые съемки стали более заметными в новостях с 1991 года, когда пять
Высокогидированные массовые стрельбы произошли в период с октября по декабрь
год (Duwe 2007, 1). Это начало медленный переход от серийных убийц к массовым убийцам,
которые снова изменили мнения и нернокоплым американской общественности (возможно, лучше всего
продемонстрировано термином «идти по почте», который возник после массовых съемков
Почтовые работники, которые произошли в том же периоде времени 1991 года). Хотя массовые убийства приобрели
внимание и продолжать заполнять передний план новостных счетов, снова важно
Помните, что это редкий, преувеличенный случай, который является самым «новостью достойным» и прибыльным.
Дальше средств массовой информации достигает, а тем быстрее он может получить информацию для общественности, тем больше
Сенсационные истории могут быть накачаны через Интернет, 24-часовые новостные каналы, социальные10.
СМИ и другие розетки. Этот постоянный поток публичной информации не только дает случайный
Общественные наблюдатели Доступ к шокирующему контенту, он обеспечивает авеню, которым те, кто
намеренно искать дальнейшую информацию в убийства, не только найти больше ужасных
Детали преступлений, но и находят других, которые разделяют в их увлечение.
Целью данной статьи является изучение публичных ответов на массовые и последовательные убийства
с помощью легенды выступления поездки, специально связанные с преступлением, и рассмотреть
Разработка и производительность идентичности в онлайн-истинном сообществе преступности
найдено на Tumblr. Приближая посмотрите на таможенную таможню и самоидентификацию на участии,
Я намерен объяснить не только почему эти группы формируются и сохраняются, но и исследовать
Целью эти группы служат для членов и почему изучение таких видов деятельности
необходимо для будущих исследований в фольклористиках и других областях.
Преступление
Представьте себе движение по длинной дороге в Солт-Лейк-Сити, штат Юта, направляясь на восток через
Город перед пронтом южного края университета университета кампуса Юта. Студенты спешит
от парковки до отдела зданий и обратно снова - типичная среда колледжа
полный жизни и жизненной силы. Поверкаю налево немного дальше по дороге, знак для Hoogle Utah
Зоопарк появляется справа, в то время как это место наследия наследия возникает слева.
Все прекрасно на этот ранний весенний день: свежий воздух, деревья только начинающие бутоны, желтый
Травы с подсказками зеленого, а чувство зимы, по-настоящему прошло. Даже имя
Дорога, проспект Sunnyside, говорит о счастливых временах впереди. Однако меньше мили
прочь, спрятанный в роще деревьев на эмиграционной дороге каньона, лежит фундамент
Небольшая кабина, связанная с одним из самых печальных серийных убийц Америки: Тед Банди.
11.
Салон, длинный пустой, был разорван в 2006 году, и все, что остается грубой
Схема фундамента и въезда на небольшой погреб. Приближаясь к структуре, пиво
Банки и мусорные мусор щетку и грязь полых. Там небольшая область, где упал
Деревья, установленные в виде скамей, окружают остатки большого огня. Простые следы выставлены
Вход погреба. Его упускают дверь, но стены структуры покрыты
Граффити-отметки предыдущих посетителей. В нижней части структуры очень маленькая,
Бетонная комната, где детрит собирает вокруг длиннозернивного водонагревателя. Внезапно есть
Шелеша в кустах, а призрачное отголосы мужского голоса поплавок через чаще,
Создание уже жутко устроиться еще более ужасающим. Хотя это дневной свет и разговаривает о
Призраки и привидения обычно устанавливаются как несколько глупые, истории
Убийства Банди и возможность того, что, возможно,-просто, возможно,-тела все еще похоронены
под водяным резервуаром вызывает непосредственную реакцию; вдруг нет ничего более
важно, чтобы оставить это место. Немедленно. Достижение автомобиля, смущение наборов в
и идея бояться заброшенного резервуара, воображаемых могил и
Случайный ветерок чувствует себя несколько по-детски.
Рис. 2-3: Лестница в погребе кабины TED Bundy в каньоне эмиграции, Солт-Лейк-Сити, Юта (фотографии
автор)
12.
Рис. 4-5: Остатки кабины TED BUNDY в каньоне эмиграции, Солт-Лейк-Сити, Юта (фото автора)
Этот тип опыта не уникален в мире фольклора. Тысячи
подростки участвуют в этих видах легенды-поездок каждый год, ищут острые ощущения
неожиданный и необъяснимый. Чем более знакомые легенды поездок в окружающую веру и
Сверхъестественный опыт: призраки, призраки, имущество, отрубленные руки, исчезают
автомагистрали, загадочные предметы или видения, «жуткие» места или подобные встречи. Январь
Брунванд (1996) описывает поездку на легенду как ритуал среди подростков, которые включают в себя
трехчастья структура. Во-первых, начальная поездка в определенное место, обычно далеко от
Дома подростки. Во время этого движущегося процесса подростки рассказывают истории о предыдущем
Визиты, которые могут быть личным опытом или опытом, которые произошли с другом или офером.
Во-вторых, после приезда на место, участники осмелится друг другу, чтобы выступить
легенда; Результаты ритуальных действий могут быть положительными или отрицательными. Наконец, как они уходят
или сразу после после того, как подростки делятся своей интерпретацией событий, которые они
Опытные, которые часто приводят к дальнейшему визитам на сайт (Брунван и 1996, 437-438).
Эти виды деятельности часто случаются ночью, усиливая атмосферу Eerie и
Добавление к тайне и испуганным и опытным участникам.
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Along with the performance of ritual, the location of a legend site plays an equal
role in the legend trip experience. Many legend trips happen in cemeteries, run-down
buildings, wooded areas, or any space tucked into the darker corners of the local
landscape. This type of environment allows legend trippers to have a sense of
“ambivalence and [creates a] special atmosphere of exhilaration and fear” (Bird 1994,
200). While legends can be told at any time or place, given the right context the legend
trip provides a time-out-of-place or liminal moment where beliefs and practices are held
in suspension. Michael Kinsella (2011) explains further, stating that “just as a car allows
teens to explore places that were previously inaccessible, so do legend-tripping locales
provide for experiences generally inaccessible in everyday life” (30). Because of the
liminality of the place, participants do or say things they would normally eschew in the
brighter hours of the day, and in the safety of their natural environment. Trippers
challenge the legend (and challenge their belief of the legend) in a brief, suspended
moment where anything can happen.
Bill Ellis (2001) asked the question of what people actually do when they tell
legends. “From experience, we can see that people gather to share information about
happenings that they accept both as significant and as actually, allegedly, or potentially
part of the real-life world they inhabit” (11). In this way, while liminality allows the
legend tripper to suspend belief or disbelief, the actual legend being told is neither
random nor happenstance. Its importance and specifications are “subject to communal
composition and performance” (9), which relies entirely upon the group telling the
legend. Those who are local will tell the legend according to the issues of identity and
beliefs most important to them, while outsiders may emphasize different aspects of the
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legend that are more important to their own group. In other words, “the specific interests
of one group, which determine to a large extent the text being narrated, may have little in
common with the interests of other groups” (Ellis 2001, 9). Consider the legend of El
Cucuy told to Latino children all over the world. This legendary monster is most similar
to the bogeyman, in that the creature is said to harm children who misbehave. While the
basics of the legend remain the same, the reason for childen to fear El Cucuy is
dependent on group, location, and situation. It may be that El Cucuy will terrorize
children who walk into a certain dangerous area (important only to those who live
nearby), or El Cucuy will come after children who don’t clean their room, if that is a
current issue within a family group (Melissa Veloz, pers. comm.). The details, then,
depend on the “specific interests” of the person telling the legend, and what their desired
outcome will be as “the narrative is variated to fit the needs of the culture and its
tradition” (Tangherlini 1990, 378). For the child, the possibility of El Cucuy being real is
the key factor. It creates a liminal time and place of challenging the belief of the child,
thus the experience follows the legend trip model.
What, then, happens when sharing legends or participating in legend-tripping
focuses on a taboo subject such as serial killers and mass murderers? One could argue
that these types of participatory experiences are modern developments or fads (speaking
to the fear that sensibilities towards death and gore are being dulled) but this particular
fascination with the crime of murder is anything but new. As Linda Dégh (2001) points
out, criminally based legends and trips have roots that go back to at least the eighteenthand
nineteen-century (437), though this timeline likely does not go back far enough. For
15
the purposes of this study it is enough to suggest that, as serial and mass murders are not
“modern” concepts, groups who follow such killings are neither modern nor a fad.
Jack the Ripper, the serial killer who terrorized the Whitechapel district of
London in 1888, is arguably the most infamous killer of all time. This particular killing
spree “inspired and motivated travel and tourism industry activity both at the time of the
crimes and ever since” (Gibson 2006, 52). These tours are a major draw to the area and
bring in serious revenue for local business owners. This tourism is financially beneficial
today, but also boosted the local economy while the killings were happening. Dirk
Gibson (2006) explains that the murders were ghastly but so compelling that they
attracted attention to what was a normally avoided area of London. When the public
realized several gruesome killings were connected, people became fascinated with the
newspaper articles full of vivid details and the brutality of the murders. During the
investigations, sightseers visited many of the murder sites and often disturbed the crimes
scenes so completely that much of the hope in finding evidence was lost. “Those lucky
enough to have a view from one of the many buildings surrounding the sites sold window
seats, and there was no lack of customers. The streets leading to the murder sites were
literally choked with thousands of people” (Gordon 2001, 116). The locals cashed in on
the situation and, in some instances, “visitors were offered a seamless package including
lodging, entertainment, dining, and even mementos of their visit” (Gibson 2006, 55). The
fascination with the identity of the mysterious killer never really ended. A brief search on
the Internet shows the abundance of walking tours, ghost tours, pub crawls, maps for selfguided
tours, and pages of articles dedicated to the new, and much contested, Jack the
Ripper Museum in London’s East End. The legends and rumors surrounding his identity
16
are still circulating—even when the latest DNA practices used in recent attempts to name
him (Bolton 2015; Mosbergen 2014) do not offer the expected results.
Unknown killers such as Jack the Ripper continue to fascinate us. Performing
personal legend-trips or taking commercial tours to sites related to bygone killers,
especially Jack the Ripper, are no longer thought to be perverse or weird. As Jeannie
Thomas (2015) points out, “Once they have taken hold in an area, invasive narratives
take root. They don’t go away, they are not always easy to deal with, and they usually
require that locals grapple with them in one way or another” (51). For instance, tourists
who travel to London will likely want to hear stories about Jack the Ripper and quite
possibly take one of the many available tours based on his murder spree. Instead of being
weird, it’s expected, so much so that locals in these areas are often left dealing with the
situation either by cashing in or complaining. Gibson (2006) explains that locals not only
respond negatively to those who participate in murder-related tourism but also to those
neighbors who provide such tourist attractions. He states:
Proprietors of such venues are accused of making money from the suffering of
their neighbors…such tourism sites are almost always attacked as opportunistic
and morbid money-making methods. Because of the typical local disapproval,
serial murder-induced tourism is frequently shut down and/or banned. Quite often
such sites were demolished. (58)
In some instances, though, serial murder becomes quite lucrative for locals. Jack the
Ripper’s crime scenes have become so commercial and sterilized at this point there is
rarely an emphasis placed on the victims other than mentioning their names and
discussing exactly how their bodies (and body parts) were mutilated and strewn about.
The fascination with Jack the Ripper is not a singular incident. Crime enthusiasts
all over the world gather to talk about murder cases, often sharing rumors and legends
about the killers. Many outsiders who are not within the crime enthusiast group view this
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interest as distasteful. The practice of sharing personal legends about these killers is
under constant scrutiny for those who are often negatively judged for belonging to what
outsiders consider to be a fandom. These etic reactions are understandable, given that
many of these serial- or mass-murder cases are particularly brutal or involve those who
are perceived to be more innocent that others (school children or religious groups). Public
dislike of true crime followers is also partially attributable to the perceived
commercialization of more recent events. For instance, Hangman Tours offers a 90-
minute walking tour of sites related to Jeffrey Dahmer’s hunting grounds in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin. For $25.00, the “Cream City Cannibal” tour invites participants to “Listen to
the cautionary tales and gruesome events of his depraved murdering spree as [they] walk
in in the footsteps of the predator” (Hangman Tours 2015). On the other side of the
country, and for $30.00 per person, Seattle’s Private Eye Tours (2015) takes participants
on a tour of several killing sites, including those of the Wah Mee massacre, the Capitol
Hill massacre, and more.3 Hundreds of people sign up for these and other tours each year,
ready to take a peek at the places where brutal murders took place. People all over the
world travel to similarly grisly sites, fascinated by the macabre and the killers who
commit such violent acts. Though undoubtedly people during the Ripper’s crime-spree
were fascinated by the mystery surrounding the killer, it is important to remember that if
the transmission of information about not only this murder, but all murders, affects the
lives of those who knew and loved the victims. While it is possible that violent killings
such as those of Jack the Ripper have become less shocking simply because 127 years
have passed, is it also possible that dark tourism will someday catch up to those violent
killers whose crimes are now playing out on our televisions.
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In a study of serial killer-related tourism in several countries, Gibson (2006)
“surveyed 140 cases of serial murder and identified numerous instances of travel and
tourism activity, representing nearly 60% of the sample” (58). Of the 140 cases, then, 84
have some form of formalized tourism associated with it—cases excluding the numbers
for mass murder. The commodification of these sites initially appears to contradict the
idea that these areas of attraction can be considered folklore. The tours themselves are
perhaps more along the line of the Brothers Grimm: the tours are a modified, often
sterilized, versions of the local and personal legends surrounding the killers, and the
stories are sold for money. Yet, as Lauri Honko (1968) said, “It is often forgotten that a
definition refers to an ideal type, rather than being an exact representation” (qtd.
Tangherlini 1990, 377). Surveys such as Gibson’s function as a way to monitor the extent
of commercial travel. While money-based thanatourism is not an ideal register of the
personal legend-trip, it can be assumed that if the masses are paying to travel to these
areas at this degree, the folk are participating as well.4 Even then, the experience a tourist
has during a mass-produced event can create similar responses to a typical legend trip.
Those who travel to a location, no matter who travels with them, experience the
landscape in an individual way. There is a tremendous difference between those who seek
out these dark tourism places as a form of recreation versus those who seek out these
places on a more personal level; those who travel with a tour group can still feel a deeper
sense of connection (creating the legend-trip experience) than those who are traveling for
entertainment purposes. This leads to the question of whether or not it would be
beneficial to have new terminology for this specific type of legend trip.
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Legends and legend-tripping are most often directly associated with belief and the
supernatural. However, as noted above, works such as those by Brunvand (1996), Dégh
(1996; 2001), and Ellis (2001; 2004) are specifically looking at the participatory nature of
belief legends. As legends do not always focus on supernatural events, there is a need for
a distinction between those legend-trips associated with the mystical and those associated
with personal legends told about historical criminals. While there are elements of the
supernatural in some of these narratives, it is not the supernatural that necessarily drives
people to visit these locations—it is the shocking and often graphic details of the case, the
criminals, and the victims. In an online survey conducted in September 2015, I asked
participants whether or not they ever traveled to a site related to serial or mass killings.
Of the 143 participants who responded to the question, 32 responded in the affirmative
and gave a more detailed account of their trip. The following experience was given by
Rose, who went out of her way to participate in a Jack the Ripper walking tour in
London5
:
For Jack the Ripper, my friend came along with me. I thought I had already read
everything there was to know about JtR, but I learned things on the tour I never
knew, specifically, how exactly he killed his victims. I remember feeling really
disturbed at Mitre Square and Miller's Court, especially. After the tour, the guide
pointed to a pub that they suspect JtR frequented, and may have even met his
victims at, and suggested we go have a drink there, but I grabbed my friend and
we went to the nearest Underground station instead because I was pretty freaked
out by the whole thing.
Her reaction to the tour is very similar to the reaction of legend-trippers; they get spooked
and quickly leave the trip site. However, this is not always the reaction to visiting crime
scenes. A second respondent, Mike, explained the emotional response he felt while
visiting Belanglo State Forest in New South Wales, Australia. The forest is known for
“The Backpacker Murders” where the bodies of seven victims were found, brutally
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murdered by Ivan Milat between January 1990 and April 1992 (Sutton 2014). Mike
recounted his experience in the forest:
It was a place of peace for me - a solitary place where the outside world did not
seem to stretch (which is perhaps why Milat chose it as his dumping grounds).
There are rumours (and had been long before the murders) that the forest was
haunted, and it's easy to see why.
For Mike, the experience of being in a place where murders happened was not disturbing.
Though he visited with the intent to be in the place where these murders happened, the
concepts of death and hauntings are mentioned in passing, as in the end it became a place
where he spent the day exploring a world outside his normal boundaries. In many ways,
those participants who go out of their way to travel to these areas are not necessarily
searching for a confirmation or challenge of supernatural belief; they are instead
performing something more akin to pilgrimage.
In a discussion of religious pilgrimage compared to recreational travel, Erik
Cohen (1992) explains that, typically, pilgrimage is associated with The Center, or “the
most sacred place on earth,” while travel is associated with The Other, or “the strange
and the attractive, the threatening and the alluring…lurking in the recesses of chaos
surrounding the ordered, ‘civilized’ cosmos” (51). Cohen points out that “new centers of
political and cultural pilgrimage have now emerged, symbolizing the basic values of the
polity” (52), meaning that pilgrimage and travel are dependent on the cultural values of
those who participate (a very folkloric perception). He concludes that pilgrim-tourists
“travel towards the religious, political, or cultural centers of their cultural world” while
travel-tourists “travel away from [these centers] into the periphery of that world” (59).
Therefore, pilgrimage and tourism have a delicate interplay of convergence and
divergence in purpose and outcome. Regardless of whether the pilgrim or traveler is
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moving towards or away from society, both are seeking an escape. This escape happens
either through recreational diversion (external modes), or existential diversion (internal
modes). In either case, the pilgrim and the traveler change their focus to The Center or
The Other which allows them to “opt-out” from their everyday social boundaries.
Because pilgrimage moves towards the center of society (including political and cultural
sites), it “reinforces [the pilgrim’s] commitment to basic cultural values; he is restituted
to, and reconciled with, his role and position in society” (59). In contrast, the tourist seeks
alienation from this center of society. Their Center is not changed, rather they move away
from their Center for a moment to be revitalized, but this process happens through
alienation instead of reconciliation.
Here, then, is the distinction between the mass-produced tour and the folkloric
crime-trip. While both types of participants (the travel-tourist and the pilgrim-tourist)
seek escape by means of traveling to specific locations where crimes took place, the
intent of the Traveler is more superficial than the intent of the Pilgrim. If a person uses a
commodified tour as a means to obtain access to certain areas, or to exchange narratives,
it does not mean the participant is incapable of participating in a crime-trip. The
individual on the commercialized tour has equal opportunity, as mentioned above, to
experience a movement towards their Center, while others travel towards the Other. This
does not mean the experience does not fulfill the escapism need for the Traveler, it -
simply means that the crime-tripper has a different experience. The first is an external
excitement over being in a “spooky” area, while the second experiences something
deeper, not unlike concepts of the sublime where the more ugly aspects of the world are
sought after in order to experience life in a more substantial way (Brady 2013). This
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happens through heightened emotions when experiencing the ugliness of human nature
and can have a variety of outcomes, both positive and negative.
The postulation of varied response is tied directly to the idea that each participant
has unique personal interests, fears, and experience. Therefore not all who participate in a
legend trip have the same reaction. This concept is demonstrated in a personal interview
with Matt Stockett, as he described visiting Kay’s Cross in Kaysville, Utah with a group
of friends. The group was made up of teen and pre-teen boys who decided to visit the
Cross, whose location is referenced in many local legends. When the group of boys
reached the site, one boy in particular would not enter the clearing where the remains of
the cross were located, while others participated in legend-telling and legend-tripping
rituals. Stockett, however, was unaffected by the situation and the trip held no real
significance. Correspondingly, not all participants have the same response in the act of
crime-tripping. For example, survey respondent Miranda’s experience visiting Adam
Lanza’s house and Sandy Hook Elementary School was emotionally draining:
A very profound sadness and uneasy feeling settled over me when visiting
Adam's house. I merely looked at the site, as I believed it would be far too
emotionally intense if I were to do anything more…I was very shocked that I had
driven by this house so many times before, and had no idea about the severe
emotional trauma that one of it's occupants was enduring. For days afterward, I
could not help but wonder what sort of inner turmoil those around me might be
experiencing that I was completely oblivious to.
Similarly, Donna visited sites related to the 1999 Columbine High School shootings. She
also experienced a different response that she originally expected:
my boyfriend took me…to Littleton and columbine and the memorial and by their
old houses. it was truly a surreal feeling at the high school and the memorial also
sadness for the lack of crosses for Eric and Dylan. I wanted to go into the school
more than anything but didn't walked around. it was just such an odd feeling.
driving by Eric old house made me feel ashamed and creepy bc of the new
owners. driving by dylans parents saddened me. I say I left more sad than I
thought I would. sad the event ever took place.
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These two survey participants had what most would consider the expected response to
being in a place where tragedy happened. But, as with varied responses with other
pilgrimage and tripping sites, Mike, Miranda, and Donna’s thought provoking
experiences were not the only reaction. In some cases, the crime-trippers felt something
more akin to euphoria.
In comparison to Rose (the woman who ran away from the Jack the Ripper tour),
Sarah found the encounter with Ripper sites to be exciting. Sarah explains:
I've made trips to London and sort of reveled in the idea that Jack the Ripper had
killed in certain locations, but only in passing. I was there on a study abroad trip
with other students from the University of Utah, where (funny enough) Ted
Bundy went to school for awhile. When I found that out and that he had done
things at the Fashion Place Mall where I frequently shopped I was more interested
in him and learning more.
Sarah’s reaction to being in these locations excited her, and increased her desire to learn
more about the crimes themselves. Instead of focusing on the effect of the crimes on the
public or individual, she was fascinated by the events that took place. This does not mean
she is callous or unfeeling, but rather that her crime-tripping provoked her curiosity. One
survey respondent, though, showed even more excitement over traveling to a crime
location. Paul did not specify which murder site he visited, though he did indicate he
traveled to a place where a murder victim’s body was found. He recounted his crime trip
as follows:
I went with a older friend of mine; The person who introduced me to the interest
of crime. Honestly I felt estactic!! Like wow, I'm going to a place someone was
killed!! What if there are ghosts? The murder him/herself?? I was absolutely off
my kid. We dug up some dirt and we keep it in a little glass bottle.
Paul’s shocking response and enthusiasm may initially appear to be an indication of his
young age (he identified himself as age 17 or younger). This would correspond with the
Ellis’ (2004) theory that legend-tripping is regularly performed by teenagers who use the
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trip as an “excuse to escape adult supervision” and “commit anti-social acts” (124). Paul
is the same age as Miranda, however, whose poignant response to visiting the Sandy
Hook sites made her more contemplative about the emotional lives of those around her.
Age, then is not necessarily an indicator of participant response. Neither is gender, as
Mike felt peaceful rather than excited during his trip. These varied responses to crimetripping
reflect the idea that the purpose of the trip and the intent of the participant have
more effect on the reaction than the demographics of the participant.
Crime-Tripping on the Web
The above survey responses are associated, specifically, with a physical crime-trip
experience. As Elizabeth Bird (1994) explains, “local legends tend to develop around
particular types of places—bridges, cemeteries, unusual graves, deserted houses and so
on” (193). Accordingly, legends not only need places of ambiguity to survive, they thrive
on it. Similar to physical locations of ambiguity, the Internet can be mysterious, unusual,
and even frightening at times—qualities that are especially dependent on the website.
More people are choosing to travel in the virtual world when physical travel is not
available, or when limitations are placed on specific types of locations. These are not the
only reasons, though, as Timothy Tangherlini (2011) points out, “Today’s legendtripping
activities aren’t limited to exploring ancient sites…Legend-trippers increasingly
rely on computer-mediated communications” (34) in order to enhance their experience.
Some may argue the Internet does not always provide the right context for legend telling,
but “a narrative should be considered in tradition when original authorship is no longer
verifiable and transmission is still actively taking place—this could occur in as few as a
single transmissionary link” (374). Quite often—through the process of sharing, re-
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blogging, re-tweeting, or re-posting—we lose track of authorship, and few bother to
search for the originating source. As with most areas of folkloristics, source genesis is not
as important as what is being shared, by whom, and for what reason. The dissemination
of information is key, and the Internet provides a unique landscape for the telling and retelling
of narratives. This type of communication allows participants to share legends
with those they would likely never meet otherwise.
Kinsella’s (2011) work in studying online legend-tripping also connects the
virtual world with the physical, even though online tripping “operates slightly differently
than when performed in face-to-face situations” (xi). He explains that because online
interaction and communication allows “tellers to instantly present various kinds of
‘evidence’” they can “hypertextually connect their accounts to other legends to form vast
legend complexes” (xi). This evidence and performance may include audio or visual
elements, discussion posts, or telling of similar legends, and can allow participants to
connect with events that occur in remote distance or time (39). The web serves as a way
for legend-trippers to “use both archived and real-time audio and video feeds as well as
message boards…[to] augment participants’ efforts towards creating a shared ritual
environment constructed from temporally or spatially distant real environments”
(Kinsella 2011, 40). Where the Internet provides the same legend telling experience as
the physical world, it also offers virtual trips to various places—some specific to serial
killer and mass murder locales. Websites such as LiveLeak.com, Jack-the-Ripper.org,
and VirtualGlobetrotting.com provide virtual tours to those who cannot travel to such
areas such as Columbine High School, Sandy Hook Elementary School, various killer’s
homes (such as Adam Lanza, Jeffrey Dahmer, and Ted Bundy), and specific aerial views
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of sights where murders happened or where bodies were discovered (e.g. Zodiac killer
locations). Thus, just as crime-tripping happens in the physical world, it happens online,
and with similar responses.
Tangherlini (2001) also compares online legend-tripping to the use of Ouija
boards. The experiences are similar in that the ambiguity from the trip does not come
from a change of physical space, but rather a change of perceived space. Ouija board
users do not have to leave their home environments to achieve the same time-out-of-place
experience of physically traveling to a magical or supernatural location (35). In this
situation, ambiguity is dependent on the participant’s willingness to mentally,
emotionally, or spiritually distance themselves from their physical surroundings. This
same willingness to suspend “real life” happens in the virtual world as well. The feelings
of fear exist, but participants also “use the legend trip as a form of play, deliberately
suspending the normal laws of the real world” (Bird 1994, 202). Crime-tripping online
serves this same function—that of brushing off social norms in order to explore a topic or
interest that is socially unacceptable. As users navigate their way through the Internet and
participate in specific groups, they create identities and form new folk groups—ones that
may differ radically from “real life.”
The Internet has become a common ground that “allows like-minded people who
would never otherwise meet (whether due to physical, geographical, or situational
obstacles) to find each other almost immediately” (McNeill 2009, 83). People meet
online in various forums or chat groups, through social media websites (Facebook,
Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, etc.), and via other means in order to discuss similar interests,
which quite often lead to the formation of fandoms. As such, the Internet provides diverse
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groups with a method of connection that would otherwise be unlikely. Even when not
specifically sharing legends, this specific type of group (the fandom) still provides a
participatory environment for people to engage in other ways. Members share narratives,
jokes, music, folk art (fan art), rumors, memes—the number of folkloric genres is far too
extensive to list here. B. Grantham Aldred asks, “But what about groups whose
interactions are inherently disembodied? Can there be an art of the self when its most
powerful symbol, the body, is unavailable?” (8). Some argue that there can’t be a sense of
self as the virtual world is fake, and personal connections that occur in a non-physical
place are not real. On the other hand, Trevor Blank (2009) explains the importance of
realizing “that just because the Internet is virtual…it still has an inherent base in the real
world. The fact remains that there is a human behind everything that takes place online”
(11). In many ways, then, virtual interactions are just as important (sometimes moreso)
than those that happen in everyday, physical existence—especially for members of
groups that participate in socially taboo discussions about murder, such as the True Crime
Community. When people join the TCC and other groups and choose to discuss topics
related to murder and violent crime, they are making a choice as to the label and
projection of their identity.
Identity in the True Crime Community
Tumblr is a website that provides a space for user-created material to be posted by
individuals; material is typically in the form of writings, digital art, pictures, videos,
memes, and other digital folklore. It is also interactive in that users can reblog posts they
like and add comments that can then be reblogged and added to again and again. The
TCC differs from a typical online forum in that it is an affiliation of pages united around
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the topic of true crime.6 Users can interact with each other via “asks” and other forms of
direct contact and have the power to grant access or block certain people from seeing
their posts. In many ways, Tumblr serves as a type of gathering place or “home” for
members of the TCC to meet one another and share information about their particular
interests. TCCers gather from all areas of the globe, and their particular section of the
Internet becomes a place where personal legends of various killers can be passed from
member to member. Lynne McNeill (2007) states that “If ‘home’…is a concept that is
increasingly unanchored, then concepts such as ‘place’ and ‘home’ must simply become
things we can take with us when we travel” (282). Thus, while communities like the TCC
have existed for quite some time without the aid of the Internet, the more “unanchored”
concept of community found in the virtual world provides an immediate sense of place
and belonging.
Satya Mohanty (2003) states, “Whether we inherit an identity…or we actively
choose one…our identities are ways of making sense of our experiences” (398). Instead
of fully gaining and losing our identity as a whole, we merely fluctuate identities as we
attempt to understand and negotiate our way through the world, which corresponds to the
idea that we change the things we say and do based on the folk group in which we find
ourselves. Aldred (2010) explains this concept of “instanced identity” while discussing
userpics on LiveJournal (an online, public journaling website). Through his observation
of the changing userpics on this particular website, he claims, “Because the totality of
identity cannot be expressed or understood through the symbolic, it is instead presented
in fragments that represent aspects of ‘instanced identity’ based in time and space, and
linked to a sense of Subjectivity” (Aldred 2010, 14). In essence, our total identity is never
29
fully revealed in one moment. Our moods change, our understandings, reactions,
experience, etc. alters as we participate in everyday life. While some of Alan Dundes’
(1983) ideas surrounding identity are a little outdated, he likens identity to funhouse
mirrors, which demonstrates the Subjectivity theory. He states:
There are many personal identities and many social identities. At some
amusement parks, one can find a battery of different mirrors. In one, a person
looks tall, in another short, in a third, skinny, a fourth, fat, etc. Which is the real
person? I would think that all the images are real in some sense and these diverse
mirrors would constitute an apt metaphor for the complexities of multiple
personal identities. (Dundes 1983, 238)
For Aldred (2010), LiveJournal userpics allowed participants to construct social identities
that reflected how they viewed themselves within the world of LiveJournal. Not only did
this allow users to create a sense of individuality, it helped them identify with groups that
created a sense of community.
As Aldred (2010) explains, “One of the ways in which many people attempt to
communicate personal identity is through connection to a group” (25). This connection
forms that sense of belonging and security found within a community. Camille BaconSmith
(1992) agrees that while group identity is important, “establishing [personal]
identity in a group is a matter of compromises, and of varying emphases…based on the
facet of the structure that is most important to [the individual]” (23). Though her study
referenced the various types of participatory methods within the Star Trek fandom, the
idea that individual identity within a group relies on specific interests follows a similar
development in the True Crime Community. The connection to the TCC is often evident
on the stylistic choice of a user’s homepage on Tumblr:
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Fig. 6. Homepage for user, ericharrisvevo
Fig. 7. Homepage for user, skykidklebold Fig. 8. Homepage for user, sociopathic-compulsions
Each of the above captured images of homepages shows some traditional traits of the
TCC Tumblr blogs: an image of a killer used as a userpic, insider references to the crime
or criminal, a message that the blogger does not condone the actions of the criminal, and
a username directly associated with an aspect of true crime.7
Even at a cursory glance, the choice of a person’s username provides a unique
identification that automatically sets that person into one of the TCC’s many subgroups.
Some usernames are explicit references to certain killers or crimes, such as:
31
mycolumbineobsession, bundyofjoy, mrsjeffreylioneldahmer, richardrramirez, and
dylannstormroofies.
8 Others are less explicit, and someone would need to know details
about the killer or crime before the reference becomes clear. Examples include
ripbowlcut (a reference to Dylann Roof’s haircut at the time of his arrest), or
vodkaismyhomie, rebobsessions, and natvral-selection which all reference the Columbine
killings.9 Whether explicitly stated or more subtle, these types of usernames let others
know the specific crime or killer the individual TCC member is most likely interested in.
Using the names of these killers, or making specific emic references to them, seems to
complicate the fan vs. non-fan labels surrounding the TCC. It is difficult to reconcile the
use of these names with the idea that people would likely not identify themselves based
on someone they hate or despise; the claims of “I do not condone” seem more doubtful in
the face of users who take a killer’s name as their own. TCC usernames, however, are
typically an outward expression as to what or who brought an individual into the TCC.
Along with individual expressions of identity for each TCC member, the group as
a whole shares an identity. The “fandom” label is an issue many members of the TCC
fight against. I discovered this in one of my initial posts, when I asked if there was a
distinction between community members and fans. I was corrected almost immediately
by bundyofjoy who stated:
A fandom is a community of people who enjoy the same things - they write fan
fiction, create videos and fan art, they create OTPs, etc. Basically fandoms refer
more to people who enjoy TV shows, movies, music artists…..
If the true crime community were to do those things and consider ourselves a
fandom we would be glorifying murderers and thats not what we do. Sure, there
are people who find themselves connected to a serial killer or a mass shooter, but
they are not fans of them. A majority of the true crime community has made it
well known that they do not condone the actions of the people they blog about.
I think the best thing to call us is a community because we’re basically just a
bunch of people who share the same interest in true crime.
32
David, another member, had similar thoughts on the subject. He explained:
To me a fandom is when you are a fan of someone. You like what they do, you
like their acting abilities or their catchy music. If you are a fan of someone, you
like them and enjoy what they do. If you are a fan of a killer, then, to me, you are
saying that you like what they've done, which is kill people. The TCC, in my
opinion, represents a common interest among a certain group of people. You are
not necessarily approving of the killer, you are just interested in their behavior
and what drove them to do what they did.
Variations of these responses were repeated frequently. Those who were interested in the
psychology, the facts, and the motivations as a way of trying to understand what
happened were the TCC members who were resolute in their non-fandom groupidentification.
They made it clear that a fan is a person who condones the actions of the
killer, and the TCC was not about that.
These explanations were interesting, yet confusing. This stuff that fans do—the
fanfiction, videos, art, jokes, memes, etc.—were present on the blogs of those who were
part of the TCC. Pictures of killers appear with flower crowns on their heads, there are
pencil sketches, users write about being attracted to certain criminals and leave notes
stating they wish they could comfort the killers before they go to trial. The fan art is often
used to emphasize different aspects of a killer’s crime, and frequently includes insider
jokes about the cases, the victims, or killers themselves. Many times the art follows
digital trends surrounding celebrities. The following images are a small sampling of such
user-created art:
33
Fig. 9-12. Various images created by Tumblr user klebitch for use as cellphone wallpaper. Images
of (left to right) Richard Ramirez, Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, and Dylann Roof.
Fig. 13. Drawing of Dylann Roof, Fig. 14. Drawing of Justin Beiber,
by Tumblr user truecrimekid by Tumblr user flawlessbeiber
Fig. 15. The Murderers Gacy, by Fig. 16. Justin Beiber painting, by SaraSam89
ScabbedAngel (DeviantArt.com) (DeviantArt.com)
34
Each of the above images of killers were created by Tumblr users who self-identify as
TCC members. The images of pop singer Justin Bieber are included to show the
similarities between those who are in the TCC and those who are in more acceptable
fandoms, such as the Beliebers.10
Fan created material does not end with art. Fans often write fanfiction (stories
written by fans about their particular interest), and TCC members also engage in this type
of writing. One member, Emily, not only writes fanfiction, but has won an award for a
story she wrote involving Jeffrey Dahmer. All these actions and interactions, sharing
multiple forms of user-created material, works against the idea that TCC members do not
constitute a fandom. These are all practices found in various celebrity fandoms
throughout the world—which is where the line exists between the identity of a True
Crime Community member and the distinction of someone belonging to a Killer Fandom
(KF). In actuality, while KF members are members of the TCC, not all members of the
TCC are members of KFs. Thus the TCC-KF (True Crime Community-Killer Fandom)
member participates in TCC practices, but also follows the actions of typical fandoms—
creating and sharing the above noted folklore—while those who identify solely as a TCC
member typically only discuss the cases without practicing the celebrity worship aspect
of the KF.
It is understandable that someone in the True Crime Community does not want to
be labeled as a fandom, as the term “fan” is in itself problematic. In trying to explain the
connotation of the word, Jenkins (1992) explains that “If the term ‘fan’ was originally
evoked in a somewhat playful fashion…it never fully escaped its earlier connotations of
religious and political zealotry, false beliefs, orgiastic excess, possession, and madness”
35
(12). This perception of zealotry and obsession typically brings a certain type of person to
mind: the crowds of teenage girls crying over the Beatles, Star Wars fans camping in the
street for days to get tickets, or Trekkies at a convention. It also connotes a certain level
of acceptance of the actions performed by the celebrity or character being worshipped. If
the TCC was willing to take on the label “fandom,” they would likely receive more
criticism than they already do. Such criticism comes in many forms (some becoming very
heated), but in the world of passive-aggressive online posts, it is typical to see
disapproval show up in ways similar to the following Tumblr post:
Fig. 17. Post created by Tumblr user uuentz
The idea that TCC members (who are often labeled as a fandom by outsiders) do not love
themselves or others is a common theme for those who are critical the group. At the time
the above image was captured, 11,105 notes appeared along with the original post. This
means more than 11,000 people liked and/or reblogged the post in the four month time
period it had currently existed. Some reblogs of this post included new messages such as
the one from kyojinkelly, who said: “Wait, serial killer fandom? Yikes!” This Tumblr
user, without knowing anything about the members, automatically assumed that the TCC
was comprised of the type of people typically thought of when the term “fandom” is
used: people who love and support the person or thing for which they are a fan.
36
The “fandom” label is problematic for the True Crime Community. Media
coverage often fixates on those who are fascinated by serial killers, calling them
groupies, disturbed, deviants, or any number of insults. Even scholars such as Dégh
(2001) and Ellis (2004) refer to those who would likely belong to the TCC as “sickos” or
“psychos.” Members of the TCC, however, do not take posts (like the above mentioned)
lightly. One particular reblog demonstrates the typical response:
Fig. 18. Posted by Tumblr user godsonlyplan (in response to Fig. 17)
Bacon-Smith’s (1992) work with Trekkies concluded that “An interest in the performer is
almost always secondary to an interest in the character he portrays” (37), but the opposite
can be said of the True Crime Community and Killer Fandoms. The interest in the
general character of “killer” is often secondary to the importance of the personal
character of “performer” (the killer himself). Yes, the cases are discussed, details of
crime scenes and trials pass from person to person, but more often than not the emphasis
37
is placed on who the killers are (or were) in a normal environment. TCCers want to dig
into the childhood, the familial relationships, religion, schooling, sexuality, psychology,
and thoughts of the killer; they are searching for clues as to motivation. Those who are
solely members of the True Crime Community are interested in details to make sense of
the violence. Those who belong to the killer fandoms, on the other hand, search for this
same information to feel closer to the killer on a personal level, obsessing over the
minutiae of everyday life in the same manner a Belieber would obsess over Justin
Bieber’s daily routine. While they do discuss motivation to some extent, more often the
focus is on physical attributes of the killers, along with various desires to either comfort
the killers or engage in sexual encounters. This is not to say that these fans condone the
crimes or are unaware of the emotional toll on the victims’ families, but they are engaged
in a form of play.
Jennifer, a survey participant, best described the difference between strictly True
Crime Community members and killer fans as such:
Many people who consider themselves part of this crime community do not
consider themselves fans of crime or criminals. They have an interest in crime and
criminals and like to discuss it and share photos amongst themselves.
Undoubtedly, there are some people who consider themselves part of the crime
community who truly are fans of certain criminals. There is a gray line between
interest and obsession that many people seem to have crossed. At the point of
making shrines to dead criminals (which I have seen), it is more than an interest,
in my opinion.
This sentiment was echoed by Bailey, another survey participant and member of the
TCC, who made an interesting observation about age. As she explains, those who tend to
fall into the fandom categories are younger members usually under the age of 16. She
says:
They tend to do things like write fan fiction about the perpetrators and sometimes
actually base their fashion on murderers for example I've seen a few people
38
wearing the "natural selection" and "wrath" tops that Eric Harris and Dylan
Klebold wore on April the 20th. They also tend to glorify and condone murderers,
when most of us in the true crime community never disrespect the victims or say
we condone it. We always remember the loss of lives, and don't fantasize about
the murderers.
That there is a difference in how older members of the TCC act as compared to the
younger members of the TCC-KF coincides with Bird’s (1994) observations about age
and telling legends. She explains that “Different people tell different stories, and there
seems to be some correspondence between age and themes” (195). She explains that there
is a connection between how people experience and tell stories based on their age and
experience. In a way, the connection between the sharing of stories (whether they are
fanfiction or personal legend) becomes autobiographical. Again, Bailey’s observations
about the younger group members explains why they may act more along the lines of a
fandom. She says, “I've noticed that the most popular fandoms tend to be for school
shooters rather than serial killers as well, and i think this is because they tend to associate
maybe with some of their experiences.” These experiences tend to be ones of otherness—
of being outcasts of society, misunderstood, and struggling to make sense of a world
where violence is played out on 24-hour news channels and media outlets.
Conclusion
Legends are more than scary stories; they serve a very specific purpose for those
who take part in such tellings, as “Legend tries to reconstruct reality in a believable
fashion. Legend narrative is linked to outer reality, opposed to the inner reality of
folktale” (Tangherlini 1990, 372). The TCC and killer fandoms use this legend-telling
experience about serial killers and mass murderers to make sense of an outer reality that
is confusing or terrifying. According to Ellis (2001), “legend telling is the communal
39
exploration of social boundaries” (11). In other words, people telling the legend, along
with those hearing the legend, come to an agreement about what is real, unreal,
acceptable, or unacceptable within their community. “Legend, thus, acts as a symbolic
representation of collective experiences and beliefs, expressing fears and desires
associated with the common environmental and social factors affecting both the active
and passive traditional bearers” (Tangherlini 1990, 381). The killers the TCC discuss
reacted to the world in one of the most taboo ways: taking lives in order for the outer
reality become non-existent for their victims. For members of the TCC, sharing the
stories of these killers and their victims and participating in acts of virtual play provides a
way to navigate through societal fears of death, gratuitous violence, and loss of
innocence—especially in societies that may eschew discussion of such detailed
information in public or private lives.
While some survey results and interview participants responded with what many
people would consider disturbing answers, on the whole the TCC and different killer
fandoms were full of people like Rose, who participated in the Jack the Ripper tour. In
talking about how she feels about serial killers, Rose admitted:
After the Jack the Ripper tour, I realized that…in the abstract, they're really
interesting, but when faced with the actual reality of their crimes (such as looking
at the building where someone murdered Mary Kelly in a really horrific way), it
makes me feel deeply disturbed.
Rose’s response is a realization that communities or fandoms that surround violent crimes
participate in a form of play, and that such play may not indicate how they would respond
in a real-life situation. In many ways, these groups are using the taboo subject of murder
to participate in the time-out-of-place environment that pilgrims (and many others) have
utilized in order to break from everyday life so as to better deal with their own reality.
40
Yet, despite the fact that the True Crime Community has found an outlet to attempt to
deal with these societal fears, they continue to be stigmatized by some who consider
themselves to be a part of “normal” society. Henry Jenkins’ (1992) states that a fan “still
constitutes a scandalous category in contemporary culture, one alternately the target of
ridicule and anxiety, of dread and desire…whose interests are fundamentally alien to the
realm of ‘normal’ cultural experience and whose mentality is dangerously out of touch
with reality” (15). His analysis concludes that “The fan, whose cultural preferences and
interpretive practices seem so antithetical to dominant aesthetic logic, must be
represented as ‘other,’ must be held at a distance so that fannish taste does not pollute
sanctioned culture” (19). Jenkins was speaking mainly about fans of television and films;
how much more keenly are these feelings of otherness and exclusion—of being treated as
person who might be contagious—felt by many in the TCC? As David points out:
I do get confused that I am singled out for having an interest in serial killers (and
natural disasters and death and so on), because everyone must have somewhat of
an interest in them, because why would they be plastered all over the media? Why
are their names mentioned in songs? Why are their lives made into movies?
Perhaps everyone has some degree of interest in killers, but people in the TCC are
willing to openly admit it while others prefer to uphold social norms.
His questions seem valid. In some way, normal people who come across the True Crime
Community use them in order to feel more normal.
Dundes (1983) explains that “As there can be no self or concept of self without
other, there can be no sense of group without some other group” (239). In essence, we
are unique only because we classify ourselves as different; we “other” ourselves in order
to understand and process who we are in relation to others. By understanding how we are
different, it shapes how we see our position in the world(s) that surround us. The TCC
gives others a way to reaffirm their own identity within the group of normal people,
41
which makes their own fascination with death and murder acceptable. They are able to
enjoy watching crime documentaries, slasher movies, and crime shows on television—
Law & Order, NCIS, Blue Bloods, Bones, The Fall…the list is exhausting—because at
least they aren’t “those sickos” who blog about real murder (ignoring the fact that many
of these crime dramas are loosely based on real-life events). If there was no abnormal,
normal could not exist.
Ellis (1996) explains that legends create a liminal moment when “an ambiguous
situation produces stress until witnesses find a ‘name’ or a statement of it in acceptable
cultural language. Once this is done, the act of narrating gives observers power over the
event” (xiv). If we believe, as Brunvand (1981) points out, that legends serve as a way to
deal with “many of the hopes, fears, anxieties and submerged desires of our time” (2),
then the acts of legend-telling and going legend-tripping include coded messages within
the context of the language and images that are shared. Legends provide a context in
which these fears can be overcome in that the fear or anxiety is often given a name. In
essence, legend-telling and legend-tripping allows participant to reshape and reinforce
their reality within their world. Without a name, an unending liminality is created which
becomes uncomfortable or upsetting in prolonged periods. The same holds true for crimetelling
and crime-tripping. We often see the uncomfortable liminality happen when killers
remain unnamed, and when details of crimes are hidden from the public. Yes, there is a
possibility of copycat crimes (which are in essence violent, ostensive crime-trips), but if
facts are missing, rumors tend to surface. Folkloric patterns of dissemination tell us that
rumors and misinformation travel quickly when there is a lack of clarity and direction
from a pivotal source. Those rumors can lead to public mistrust of officials and the
42
misidentification of suspects whose lives and careers are often ruined. Until naming
occurs, whether it is through the media, law enforcement, or among the folk, these fears
will continue to build. Lack of information may result in a more subversive type of
criminal who is whispered about in polite society, but never fully confronted. Perhaps it
is only when the villain has a name that we can begin to deal with the act of killing.
In many ways, the True Crime Community’s enthusiastic virtual gathering and
sharing can be seen as disturbing. Though the possibility of future killers gaining
information about previous murders is a possibility, the number of active participants in
groups such as the TCC indicates that the larger society in which they live is not fulfilling
a need. The persistence of such folk groups over the course of history, found in their
various formats, suggests that their particular form of play, while not appealing or useful
to everyone, is a healthy way to deal with social fears and anxieties—some of which are
caused by the very murders they examine and discuss. It is a way for participants to take
control of what may be an uncontrollable outer reality in order for an inner reality to
make sense.
Future Research
Continued research and observation of groups such as the True Crime Community
and more specific killer fandoms in necessary. There is some concern that while stories
of killers can offer society some control over the unknown, “they may also serve as
patterns for psychotics, cunning criminals, or desperate communities for provoking the
same fears” (Ellis 2001, 221). The idea is that by telling these stories, by naming the
killers and showing their faces, we may actually be giving suggestions and instructions
for future killings, which might cause the same society fears to return. A movement has
43
been growing among some media outlets to keep the names of killers withheld from the
public in order to keep the acts from becoming contagious. This alarm is understandable,
given that “On average, mass killings involving firearms occur approximately every two
weeks in the US, while school shootings occur on average monthly” (Towers et al. 2015,
1). Research has shown that naming killers before they are caught frequently emboldens
the criminal and increases their desire to kill (Levin and Fox 2002). It is important, then,
to discuss the possibility that because the TCC and other similar groups recirculate this
information, it keeps the images fresh and helps foster an environment where a contagion
factor is increasing these incidents.
In a recent study conducted to test the theory that media reports and coverage of
homicides (including mass shootings) “subsequently increase the incidence of similar
incidents in the community…similar to the patterns seen in the spread of infectious
disease” (2), Sherry Towers et al. gathered information from around the United States in
reference to killings, number of victims per incident, cases of mental illness per state, and
suicide rates of the killers involved (whether by self-inflicted wounds or suicide by cop).
If their work discovered that media coverage induces a contagion effect, their study
would support the idea that news outlets should reduce the air time given to such stories.
It would also suggest that groups such as the True Crime Community—who spend hours
creating and consuming violent, graphic material—may be more likely to commit such
crimes, as the contagion factor would likely be higher. However, Towers et al. state:
While our analysis was initially inspired by the hypothesis that mass media
attention given to sensational violent events may promote ideation in vulnerable
individuals, in practice what our analysis tests is whether or not temporal patterns
in the data indicate evidence for contagion, by whatever means. In truth, and
especially because so many perpetrators of these acts commit suicide, we likely
44
may never know on a case-by-case basis who was inspired by similar prior acts,
particularly since the ideation may have been subconscious. (9)
Not only were their results inconclusive as to the exact means of contagion, the results
are likely to remain inconclusive. Unfortunately, “Studies into the prevention of such
tragedies are also hampered by the freeze on federal funding for research into gun
violence in the United States, put in place by Congress in 1997” (9). Despite a
presidential memorandum issued by President Obama in 2013, the majority of
Congressional members are continuing to block federal funding in order to resume
studies previously started to research gun violence. As of the writing of this thesis, in
December 2015, no significant changes have occurred.
It is possible the information readily shared and made available by groups such as
the True Crime Community and fan groups associated with violent crimes does have a
contagion effect on those who are already likely to commit such crimes. To say mass
murder or serial killings are more prevalent now than in the past, however, is to deny that
countries and cultures are often built, lost, and rebuilt on rocky foundations of massacre
and violence. It is almost impossible to make claims of contagion based on media
coverage alone without having specific, conclusive studies funded and reviewed. Some,
in fact, argue that “As paradoxical as it may seem, exposing ourselves to representations
of death, even violent death, helps alleviate our anxiety about being claimed by such
violent death. Consuming images of…murder in carefully controlled settings…might
provide an effective way of managing anxieties about death” (Schmid 2005, 18).
Conflicting theories aside, it is imperative to know whether or not repeated exposure to
such violent crimes is the underlying factor of contagion, and whether or not serial and
mass murders are happening at a faster rate because of it.
45
It is likely that studies such as those done by Towers et al. will continue to show
partial results if folk groups such as the TCC and serial/mass murder fandoms are left out
of their research. If researchers recognize that “each individual culture places its
own…conventions and norms in opposition to groups which do not conform”
(Tangherlini 1990, 378), if they can focus beyond the “psycho” label of the TCC and
others, it is possible that the future study of these groups in conjunction with research and
analysis of gun violence can better serve as prevention for future killings instead of
allowing the contagion to continue.
46
Notes
1. Jeffrey Dahmer was convicted of killing 15 individuals from 1978-1991;
Charles Manson was convicted of killing nine individuals in 1969; Richard Ramirez was
convicted of killing 13 individuals from 1984-1985 (among other charges); Dylan
Klebold and Eric Harris killed 13 individuals and wounded 24 before committing suicide
at Columbine High School in Columbine, Colorado on April 20, 1999; Dennis Rader was
convicted of killing 10 individuals between 1974-1991; Ed Gein confessed to killing two
women (though only convicted of one murder) and exhumed multiple corpses to create
items out of skin and body parts; John Wayne Gacy was convicted of killing 33 boys and
men between 1972-1978; H.H. Holmes was convicted of killing four individuals (though
nine victims were confirmed), but it is believed the true number of victims could be close
to 200 (Hickey 2010; Holmes and Holmes 2001).
2. TJ Lane was convicted of killing three students at Chardon High School in
Chardon, Ohio on Feb. 27, 2012 (Gast and Pearson 2013); as of the writing of this paper,
Dylann Roof is scheduled for trial for killing nine individuals at Emanuel African
Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina on June 17, 2015 (Ellis 2015);
James E. Holmes was convicted of killing 12 individuals and injuring 70 others at the
Century 16 theater in Aurora, Colorado on July 20, 2012 (O’Neill 2015).
3. Kwan Fai "Willie" Mak and Benjamin Ng were convicted of killing 13
individuals at the Wah Mee gambling club in Seattle, Washington on February 18, 1983
(Carter 2014); Kyle Aaron Huff killed six individuals in the Capitol Hill neighborhood in
Seattle, Washington on March 25, 2006 (Plaza 2015).
4. Thanatourism (also known as “dark tourism”) is tourism that specifically
relates to locations associated with death or great human suffering. These sites are often
associated with war, slavery, and acts of mass casualty (Gibson 2008). Serial killer or
mass murder thanatourism is a subset of the broader term.
5. Participant names have been changed for confidentiality reasons. In order to
preserve context and texture, all participant remarks have been left in their original
language and formatting.
6. At the time I joined Tumblr and located the TCC group, a reposting chain was
in circulation that requested people to “Reblog if you’re a member of the True Crime
Community.” I found many individual bloggers because of this particular post, through
which I discovered TCC-specific tags such as: #TCC, #True Crime, #True Crime
Community, as well as tags specific to certain killers or killings (Columbiners, Roofies,
etc.).
7. Figures 2-4 were specifically chosen because of the “I do not condone”
message stated on the page. There are plenty of homepages that do not feature this
wording, but the general idea that members of the TCC do not support the actions of
killers is prevalent not only on individual pages, but also on posts.
47
.
8. Usernames and statements from Tumblr are taken from public access areas.
While pseudonyms are used to protect identities in personal correspondence between
myself and participants, anything showing on public access areas is attributed to the
accurate username.
9. “VoDkA” and “Reb” were Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris’ nicknames. Harris
wore a Natural Selection t-shirt during at the time of the shootings The use of “v” in the
username natvral-selection is a stylistic choice by the user.
10. A commonly used, emic term for a Justin Bieber fan.
48
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[5]. Текст взят из Википедии.