The Subject of Murder
Gender, Exceptionality, and the Modern Killer
The subject of murder has always held a particular fascination for  us. But, since at least the nineteenth century, we have seen the  murderer as different from the ordinary citizen—a special individual,  like an artist or a genius, who exists apart from the moral majority, a  sovereign self who obeys only the destructive urge, sometimes even  commanding cult followings. In contemporary culture, we continue to  believe that there is something different and exceptional about killers,  but is the murderer such a distinctive type? Are they degenerate beasts  or supermen as they have been depicted on the page and the screen? Or  are murderers something else entirely?
In The Subject of Murder,  Lisa Downing explores the ways in which the figure of the murderer has  been made to signify a specific kind of social subject in Western  modernity. Drawing on the work of Foucault in her studies of the lives  and crimes of killers in Europe and the United States, Downing  interrogates the meanings of media and texts produced about and by  murderers. Upending the usual treatment of murderers as isolated figures  or exceptional individuals, Downing argues that they are ordinary  people, reflections of our society at the intersections of gender,  agency, desire, and violence.
Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Murder and Gender in the European Nineteenth Century
Chapter 1. “Real Murderer and False Poet”: Pierre-François Lacenaire
Chapter 2. The “Angel of Arsenic”: Marie Lafarge
Chapter 3. The Beast in Man: Jack and the Rippers Who Came After
Part II. The Twentieth-Century Anglo-American Killer
Chapter 4. “Infanticidal” Femininity: Myra Hindley
Chapter 5. “Monochrome Man”: Dennis Nilsen
Chapter 6. Serial Killing and the Dissident Woman: Aileen Wuornos
Chapter 7. Kids Who Kill: Defying the Stereotype of the Murderer
By Way of Brief Conclusion . . .
Notes
Index