Narratology, applied
The case of narrative criminology
Criminology is foundationally an applied discipline, or one whose knowledge seeks to shape some non-academic
practice. Narratives – particularly the narratives of parties to ‘crime’ – are essential to criminology, but criminologists have
hardly engaged with narratology. This paper tracks the progression from traditional narrative research involving harm agents and
criminalized persons to a relatively new narrative criminology that is attentive to narrative forms and strategies inasmuch as it
considers these as shaping harm. In addition, the paper forecasts narrative criminology’s fruitful engagement in concepts from
rhetorical narratology. Interviews with men who perpetrated violence and insights from restorative justice encounters are used to
demonstrate the potential value of rhetorical narratological concepts to narrative criminology and to interventions informed by
narrative criminology.
Article outline
- Introduction
- Criminology as an applied field
- Criminology and stories
- Stories tell about conditions for crime
- The truth value of stories
- Narrative criminology and its inspirations
- Engaging with rhetorical narratology
- Deficient narration in stories of men held to account
- Implied authorship and pockets of reliability: Some revisions
- Underreporting
- Deficient narration impacting self and others
- Conclusion
- Notes
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References