Criminology is not a solitary discipline. Indeed, one of the joys of
identifying
oneself as a criminologist is the hybridized nature of such an
identity. Potentially incorporating sociology, law, politics, history, psychology,
linguistics, cultural studies and beyond, criminology thrives on
engaging with, rubbing up against, absorbing and being transformed by
concepts and ideas, ways of knowing and ways of doing, from a multitude
of other disciplines. Criminology is a fragmented, distorted, grotesque,
fascinating, carnivalesque, cyborgian, monstrous, shapeshifting beast.
The premise of this book is, however, that criminology is at risk of stagnating.
Structural explanations of crime, in terms of understanding through
the social, economic and political spheres, have too often neglected the
individual; while the individualization of crime and criminality continues
apace, oblivious, it seems, to the enormous and varied influences that
bear upon us. Instead, I argue, in the spirit of Wright Mills (1959/2000),
that life is made up of a range of interconnected stories. Some we are told
and some we make up. In some we are the star or co-star, in others we
are mere bit-players or may not feature at all. Stories tell us about power
and control, about what you can and cannot do. But the most exciting
stories are those that allow us to move beyond ourselves, where alternative
realities,
experiences and endings are played out.