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Criminal madness: cultural iconography and insanity. (Symposium: Media, Justice, and the Law)

Yakima Herald-Republic

| April 01, 2009 | Covey, Russell D. | COPYRIGHT 2009 Stanford Law School. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright
 
INTRODUCTION 
 
I. CRIMINAL MADNESS AND CULTURAL ICONOGRAPHY 
 
II. THE AGE OF EUGENICS: CRIMINAL DEGENERATES, SEX FIENDS, AND 
     IRRESISTIBLE IMPULSES 
 
III. THE AGE OF HITCHCOCK: THE RISE AND DEMISE OF THE FREUDIAN 
     PSYCHOPATH 
 
IV. THE NEW MONSTERS: THE RISE (AND RISE AGAIN) OF THE IMPLACABLE 
     PSYCHOPATHIC KILLER 
 
CONCLUSION 

INTRODUCTION

From Euripides to Shakespeare to Hitchcock, criminal madness has played a central role in the most popular and influential media of the day. (1) This is, perhaps, not surprising. Not only is criminal madness an intrinsically powerful melodramatic plot device, it touches upon fundamental social and psychological issues central to cultural conceptions of justice, proper social organization, and the self. Criminal madness also has posed a hard problem for law, evidenced by the timeless controversy over the boundaries of criminal responsibility, the basic meaning of the insanity defense, and the broader problem of what to do with people whose mental, intellectual, or psychological attributes diminish their ability to abide by the law.

There is a vast literature tracing, debating, and analyzing the legal tests brought to bear by judges and juries to determine if a criminal defendant is legally insane and hence not responsible for his or her criminal conduct. Far less has been written, however, about the cultural iconography of criminal madness--that is, the array of images, narratives, and symbols that popular culture deploys to enable it to tell stories about the kinds of disturbances to the social order that result from "madness" (however that concept is defined). (2) That omission deserves redress. One of the assumptions of this Article--and one shared by those working in the growing field of law and culture studies--is that the development and transformation of cultural iconography does not play out in a vacuum any more than the development and transformation of "law." Obviously, neither popular culture nor law would make any sense understood as a purely autonomous phenomenon. What is perhaps less obvious is the possibility that important insights about the law--specifically, the law of criminal madness--can be gleaned from the evolution of its cultural iconography. (3) What follows is an effort to trace the iconography of criminal madness by reference to popular cinema and an attempt to link it with the law's development over the same span. Part I provides some prefatory observations about the relation of film and culture to law. Part II explores the depiction of criminal madness in the 1930s, primarily through the monster movies of the era. Part III describes the growing embrace of psychological and psychiatric theories in midcentury cinema, which occurred precisely during a period in which the insanity defense was liberalized and constitutional checks on the state's power to institutionalize mad criminals were recognized. Finally, Part IV examines dramatic post-1970s changes in cinematic portrayals of criminals, the criminal justice system, and mad criminals, and explores ways in which the new iconography of criminal madness contributed to a dramatic shrinkage of the rights of mentally ill offenders.

I. CRIMINAL MADNESS AND CULTURAL ICONOGRAPHY

There are ample reasons to believe both that changes in law reflect changes in popular values, as well as beliefs, interests, ideas, stereotypes, attitudes, preconceptions, and fears, and that those changes, in turn, are reflected in, and shaped by what I refer to as "cultural iconography." Before proceeding, let me first clarify what I mean by that phrase. If iconography is understood as "pictorial material relating to or illustrating a subject," or "the traditional or conventional images or symbols associated with a subject," (4) then "cultural iconography" might be understood as the visual or symbolic representation of particular subjects through the main or popular cultural media. (5) Taking an iconographic approach to the study of law and film means paying special attention to the physical aspects of actors and characters and to imagery depicting the milieu in which a narrative is situated. (6) It assumes that a careful analysis of the pictorial or symbolic imagery associated with particular phenomena in popular cinema provides insight into the treatment of those same subjects when they become the subject of law.

Scholars working in the area of law and film, or law and culture more broadly, need not assume that law is in any direct sense the product of cinematic or cultural imagery. Certainly, few law and culture scholars would suggest that any neat causal arrows can be drawn, and I am not making such a claim here. (7) Indeed, it may be that cultural iconography more often is a product rather than a producer of law. Perhaps the strongest and most accurate description of the causal relationship between culture and law is captured in the notion of the "feedback loop." (8) Cultural iconography is influenced by law, and law is influenced by cultural iconography in a kind of endless process of production and reproduction. Although the idea of feedback loops suggests causal bidirectionality, we can hypothesize a number of quite plausible accounts in which culture does have a unidirectional causative impact on the shape of law in general, and of insanity law in particular.

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