This book explores contemporary American true crime narratives across
various media formats. It dissects the popularity of true crime and the
effects, both positive and negative, this popularity has on perceptions of
crime and the justice system in contemporary America.
As a collection of new scholarship on the development, scope, and
character of true crime in twenty-first century American media, analyses
stretch across film, streaming/broadcast TV, podcasts, and novels to
explore the variety of ways true crime pervades modern culture. The
reader is guided through a series of interconnected topics, starting with an
examination of the contemporary success of true crime, the platforms
involved, the narrative structures and engagement with audiences, moving
on to debates on representation and the ethics involved in portraying both
victims and perpetrators of crime within the genre.