Arresting Images: Crime and Policing in Front of the Television Camera

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Author: Aaron Doyle

ISBN-10: 0802085040

ISBN-13: 9780802085047

Category: Mass Media & Crime

While most research on television examines its impact on viewers, Arresting Images asks instead how TV influences what is in front of the camera, and how it reshapes other institutions as it broadcasts their activities. Aaron Doyle develops his argument with four studies of televised crime and policing: the popular American 'reality-TV' series Cops; the televising of surveillance footage and home video of crime and policing; footage of Vancouver's Stanley Cup riot; and the publicity-grabbing...

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While most research on television examines its impact on viewers, Arresting Images asks instead how TV influences what is in front of the camera, and how it reshapes other institutions as it broadcasts their activities. Aaron Doyle develops his argument with four studies of televised crime and policing: the popular American 'reality-TV' series Cops; the televising of surveillance footage and home video of crime and policing; footage of Vancouver's Stanley Cup riot; and the publicity-grabbing demonstrations of the environmental group Greenpeace. Each of these studies is of significant interest in its own right, but Doyle also uses them to make a broader argument rethinking television's impacts. The four studies show how televised activities tend to become more institutionally important, tightly managed, dramatic, simplified and fitted to society's dominant values. Powerful institutions, like the police, harness television for their own legitimation and surveillance purposes, often dictating which situations are televised, and usually producing 'authorized definitions' of the situations, which allow them to control the consequences. While these institutions invoke the notion that "seeing is believing" to reinforce their positions of dominance, the book argues that many observers and researchers have long overstated and misunderstood the role of TV's visual component in shaping its influences.

Acknowledgments1Introduction32Three Alternative Ways of Thinking about Television's Influences133Reality Television and Policing: The Case of Cops324Surveillance Cameras, Amateur Video, and 'Real' Crime on Television645Television and the Policing of Vancouver's Stanley Cup Riot836The Media Logic of Greenpeace1117Conclusions1338Postscript: Television and Theorizing the Evolution of Criminal Justice146Notes157Works Cited171Index187