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” to the by-product theory) and the obscure role of homicidal ideation are critically assessed. Homicide Studies Review Essay Volume 10 Number 4 November 2006 320-335 Buss, D. M. (2005). The Murderer Next Door : Why ...
his father’s murder and, due to his own actions, becomes Claudius’s next target. Unable to dissociate themselves from their affective responses, however, malcontents such as Hamlet and Essex begin ...
obsessive focus on murder : “You read too many detective stories.” “They’re good,” Bruno insists. “They show that all kinds of people can murder .” Guy replies, “I’ve always thought that’s exactly why they’re ...
were Ian Kennedy and Peter Skegg then Williams was its ‘grandfather’, which was why Kennedy and Grubb, as founding editors of the Medical Law Review , had invited him to contribute the journal's first ...
Will’s repeated declaration of a killer’s intent, ‘This is my design ’, the narration enhances the sense of how effectively he has managed to get inside a killer’s head—saying what the murderer may not have ...
– but the poem doesn’t hide that and gains from exposing it. More observations, surmises and corrections follow: And now he rises, he stands at the door ready, knowing his station is next . Was he counting ...
a pragmatic perspective on a situation whose paradoxical aspects open interesting if sometimes counter-intuitive avenues to reflect on policing and its public image. In March 2012, a series of murders ...
shoots and kills him, calling the murder the ‘most incidental thing in [his] life’ (p. 10).37 To George, the man is completely outside the framework of Englishness and the world that he knows: next to him ...
, but it would be next door to impossible for him not to think of a working-class exterior as a stigma.24 This ‘stigma’ manifests itself in a remarkable manner in the novel. When the boy David escapes from ...
of the murderer in moments that feature sonic imagery. In retrospect, it is telling that Waldo, who accidentally murders Diane Redfern in an attempt to kill Laura—his protégé, who is blind to his pathological ...
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