Introduction: Explorations in Gothic Criminology: Ruminating on Monsters, Law, and Crime — Caroline Joan 'Kay' S. Picart
I. Of Myths and Monsters
Chapter One: “Deeds of Treachery and Violence and Lust and Cruelty”: Revisiting Freud’s Primal Crimes in Aboriginal Central Australia — John Morton
Chapter Two: Criminal Anthropology, Fabulism, and Criminology’s Unacknowledged Teratological Lineage — Jon Frauley
Chapter Three: Vampire Fictions and the Conflation of Violent Criminality with Real Vampirism: A Practical Overview — John Edgar Browning and DJ Williams
II. Contagion, Monstrosity, Ethics
Chapter Four: A Double-Tap “Lilith Moral Panic” in Israel, 2014: How Labeling Others as “Monsters” Conceals Their Victimization — Orit Kamir
Chapter Five: Evil-By-Proxy and Everyday Monsters: Towards a Moral Sociology for Overcoming the Passive Observation of Evil —Michael Hviid Jacobsen
Chapter Six: Monstering Madness: Criminal Lunatics in Broadmoor 1863–1913— Lucy Williams, Sandra Walklate, and Barry Godfrey
III. Monsters in Reel/Real Life
Chapter Seven: The Purge, or Law of the Universal Monstrous — Matthew Sorrento
Chapter Eight: Contrasting Depictions of Medical Serial Killers; Doctors Pétiot and Shipman from the Manic to the Mundane — Steve Greenfield
Chapter Nine: The Redactasaurus Chronicles: Fear, Consumption and Graffiti in Capital City — Deborah Landry
IV. Law, War and Monstrous Discourses
Chapter Ten: Human Trafficking, Empathy for Victims, the Tool of Eradication —David “D.W.” Duke
Chapter Eleven: Visualizing Monsters and Just Wars in Legal and Public Analyses of Eastwood’s American Sniper — Marouf Hasian Jr.
Chapter Twelve: Monstrous Discourses, Jihadi Cool, and Emergent Counter-Terrorist Narratives: The Case of Ahmad Khan Rahami (a.k.a. Ahmad Rahimi) and the 2016 New York/New Jersey Bombings — Caroline Joan “Kay” S. Picart
Postscript: Gothic Criminology’s Evolving Frontiers — Cecil Greek