Syllabus/achievement requirements

Atkinson, R., & Rodgers, T. (2015). Pleasure zones and murder boxes: Online pornography and violent video games as cultural zones of exception. In: British journal of criminology, 56(6), 1291-1307. (15 pages)

Brookman, F., Copes, H., & Hochstetler, A. (2011). Street codes as formula stories: How inmates recount violence. In: Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 40(4), 397-424. (23 pages)

Colvin, Sarah.  2015.  “Why Should Criminology Care About Literary Fiction? Literature, Life Narratives and Telling Untellable Stories.”  Punishment & Society 17(2): 211-229. (16 sider)

Collins, R. (2009). The micro‐sociology of violence. In: The British journal of sociology, 60(3), 566-576. (10 pages)

Copes, Heith., Andy Hochstetler, and J. Patrick Williams. (2008): ““We weren’t like no regular dope fiends:” Negotiating hustler and crackhead identities.” In: Social Problems 55: 254–270. (15 pages)

Cottee, Simon and Keith Hayward (2011): “Terrorist (E)motives: The Existential Attractions of Terrorism’ In:  Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, 34: 963–986. (24 pages)

Ferrell, Jeff, Keith Hayward and Jock Young (2008): “Cultural Criminology: An Invitation.” In: Cultural criminology: An Invitation. London: Sage, p. 1-24. (24 pages) 

Ferrell, Jeff (1999): "Cultural Criminology" In:  Annual Review of Sociology 25 (1): 395–418. (20 pages).

Fj?r, E. G. (2012). The day after drinking: Interaction during hangovers among young Norwegian adults. In: Journal of Youth Studies, 15(8), 995-1010. (12 pages)

Hayward, Keith (2001): “The Vilification and Pleasures of Youthful Transgression” In: Youth Justice: Critical Readings. J. Muncie. G. Hughes and E. McLaughlin (eds.), London: Sage, p. 1-15. (12 pages).

Hayward, K.J., & Hobbs, D. (2007). Beyond the binge in ‘Booze Britain’: Liminality, and the spectacle of binge drinking. In: British Journal of Sociology, 58(3), 437–455. (16 pages).

Hegghammer, Thomas editor (2017) Jihadi Culture: The Art and Social Practices of Militant Islamists. Introduction + kap 1 i bogen, side 1-41. (39 pages).

Hobbs, D., Winlow, S., Hadfield, P., & Lister, S. (2005). Violent hypocrisy: governance and the night-time economy. European journal of criminology, 2(2), 161-183. (17 sider)

Ilan, J. (2013). Street social capital in the liquid city. Ethnography, 14(1), 3-24. (20 pages).

Jackson-Jacobs, Curtis (2004):  “Taking a Beating: The Narrative Gratifications of Fighting as an Underdog.”  In: Cultural Criminology Unleashed. London: Glasshouse, p. 231-244. (13 pages).

Joosse, Paul, Sandra M. Bucerius, Sara K. Thompson (2015). Narratives and Counternarratives: Somali-Canadians on Recruitment as Foreign Fighters to Al-Shabaab, In: The British Journal of Criminology 55(4), 811–832. (17 pages)

Lauger, T. R. (2014). Violent stories: Personal narratives, street socialization, and the negotiation of street culture among street-oriented youth. In: Criminal Justice Review, 39(2), 182-200. (16 pages)

Leuprecht, Christian, Todd Hataley, Sophia Moskalenko and Clark McCauley (2009): “Winning the Battle but Losing the War? Narrative and Counter-Narratives Strategy.” In: Perspectives on Terrorism 3(2): 25-35. (10 pages).

Loseke, Donileen R. (2009): “Examining Emotion as Discourse: Emotion Codes and Presidential Speeches Justifying War.” The Sociological Quarterly 50(3): 499-526 (20 pages)

Lyng, Stephen (1990): "Edgework: A social psychological analysis of voluntary risk taking." In: American Journal of Sociology 95 (4), p. 851–886. (33 pages).

Page, Michael, Lars Challita and Alistair Harris (2011): “Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula: Framing Narratives and Prescriptions.” In: Terrorism and Political Violence 23(2): 150-172. (23 pages).

Presdee, M. (2004). Cultural criminology: The long and winding road. Theoretical criminology, 8(3), 275-285. (8 pages)

Presser, Lois (2009): “The narratives of offenders.” In: Theoretical Criminology 13(2): 177–200. (18 pages).

Presser, L. (2012). Getting on top through mass murder: Narrative, metaphor, and violence. Crime, Media, Culture, 8(1), 3-21. (16 pages)

Presser, L. (2004). Violent offenders, moral selves: Constructing identities and accounts in the research interview. Social problems, 51(1), 82-101. (17 pages)

Presser, Lois & Sveinung Sandberg (eds.) (2015): Narrative Criminology: Understanding Stories of Crime. New York: New York University Press. Introduction, Chapter 1, 2, 5, 6, Conclusion. (103 pages)

Sandberg, S. (2009). Gangster, victim or both? The interdiscursive construction of sameness and difference in self‐presentations. The British journal of sociology, 60(3), 523-542. (20 pages)

Sandberg, Sveinung (2013): “Are self-narratives unified or fragmented, strategic or determined? Reading Breivik’s manifesto in light of narrative criminology.” In: Acta Sociologica 56(1): 69-83. (13 pages).

Sandberg, S., Tutenges, S., & Copes, H. (2015). “Stories of Violence: A Narrative Criminological Study of Ambiguity”. In: British Journal of Criminology 55(6): 1168–1186. (16 pages)

Schofield, Karin (2004): “Collision of Culture and Crime: the Commodification of Child Sexual Abuse.” In: Cultural Criminology Unleashed. London: Glasshouse, p. 121-131. (11 pages).

Shaw, R. (2010). “Neoliberal Subjectivities and the Development of the Night‐Time Economy in British Cities”. Geography Compass, 4(7), 893-903. (pages 9)

Smith, Philip  (2005):  Why War?  The Cultural Logic of Iraq, the Gulf War, and Suez.  Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Chapter 1, 5 and 6. p. 3-34 and 154-228 (105 pages).

Tutenges, Sébastien, and Morten Hulvej Rod. (2009). “We got incredibly drunk . . . It was damned fun.” Drinking stories among Danish youth. In: Journal of Youth Studies 12: 355–70. (15 pages).

Tutenges, S. & Sandberg, S. (2013). Intoxicating stories: the characteristics, contexts and implications of drinking stories among Danish youth. In: International Journal of Drug Policy. 24(6): 538– 544. (6 pages)

 

743 pages

Published Nov. 20, 2017 1:02 PM - Last modified Nov. 20, 2017 1:02 PM