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Law and Justice as Seen on TV »

Book cover image of Law and Justice as Seen on TV by Elayne Rapping

Authors: Elayne Rapping
ISBN-13: 9780814775608, ISBN-10: 0814775608
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: New York University Press
Date Published: November 2003
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Elayne Rapping

Elayne Rapping is a Professor of Women's Studies and Media Studies at SUNY Buffalo and a nationally known media critic and analyst, whose work has appeared in The Village Voice, Newsday, The Nation, Cineaste, and other publications. Her recent books include Media-tions: Forays into the Culture and Gender Wars and The Culture of Recovery: Making Sense of the Self-Help movement in Women's Lives. She lives in Buffalo and Manhattan.

Book Synopsis

Law and Justice as Seen on TV examines the impact, significance, and social and political problems raised by the enormous onslaught of law-related television programming, both fiction and nonfiction, in the years since the rise of live televised trials as major media events. The book weaves together the various strands—media history and analysis, legal history and policy, and the national turn to the political right in the last decades—which gave birth to this trend and has kept it thriving and growing, by leaps and bounds, to the present day.

Beginning with the history of courtroom drama on TV and its various contradictions and shifts, since the late 1940s to the present, the book analyzes the various entertainment series and genres that have so proliferated in recent years, giving special attention to such popular and influential series as "Law and Order" and "Cops." The second section begins by charting the complex and contested history of the coming of cameras to the courtroom and the way in which that legal decision led to televised trials and to the rise of Court TV. It examines as especially interesting and important the major trials—such as those of the Menendez brothers, O.J. Simpson, and Timothy McVeigh—which helped to shape the way television came to frame trials and their social implications for public consumption. From there it examines major social issues—gender violence, youth crime, family dysfunction, victims' rights which, with the rise of the courtroom as a major political and television arena, have come to be viewed largely as legal issues to be discussed and determined in legal terms by Americans in general.

Accessibleand lucid, Law and Justice as Seen on TV concludes with an examination of the broad implications of this social and cultural trend, closing with some thoughts about its expansion, on television and in the actual legal arena, during the "war on terrorism" in the wake of 9/11.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction1
IFiction and Entertainment Genres
1The Return of the Attorney-Hero: Politics and Justice in the Prime-Time Courtroom21
2Aliens, Nomads, Mad Dogs, and Road Warriors: Tabloid TV and the New Face of Criminal Violence48
3Signs of the Times: Oz and the Sudden Visibility of Prisons on Television71
IINews and Documentary Genres
4Cameras, Court TV, and the Rise of the Criminal Trial as Major Media Event103
5The Politics of Representation: Gender Violence and Criminal Justice138
6Television and Family Dysfunction: From the Talk Show to the Courtroom169
7Television and the Demonization of Youth202
8Television, Melodrama, and the Rise of the Victim's Rights Movement236
Conclusion: The Criminalization of American Life252
Notes273
Index289
About the Author309

Subjects