Urban Crime Control in Cinema: Fallen Guardians and the Ideology of Repression

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This book uses popular films to understand the convergence of crime control and the ideology of repression in contemporary capitalism. It focuses on the cinematic figure of the fallen guardian, a protagonist who, in the course of a narrative, falls from grace and becomes an enemy of the established social order. The fallen guardian is a figure that allows for the analysis of a particular crime control measure through the perspective of both an enforcer and a target. The very notion of ‘justice’ is challenged, and questions are posed in relation to the role that films assume in the reproduction of policing as it is. In doing so, the book combines a historical far-reaching perspective with popular culture analysis. At the core remains the value of the cinematic figure of the fallen guardian for contemporary understandings of urban space and urban crime control and how films are clear examples of the ways in which the ideology of repression is reproduced.

This book questions the justifications that are often given for social control in cities and understands cinema as a medium for offering critique of such processes and justifications. Explored are the crime control measures of private policing in relation to RoboCop (1987), preventative policing and Minority Report (2002), mass incarceration in The Dark Knight Rises (2012), and extra-judicial killing in Blade Runner 2049 (2017). The book speaks to those interested in crime control in critical criminology, cultural criminology, urban studies, and beyond.

Author(s): Vladimir Rizov
Series: Palgrave Studies in Crime, Media and Culture
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 233
City: Cham

Acknowledgements
Contents
1: Introduction
Overview
Cinema, Cities, Critique
Critical Criminology and Critique of Criminology
References
2: Cinema
Cinematic Realism
Cinematic Narrative Justice
Capitalist Realism
References
3: Cities
Urban Social Science
Urban Abstractions
Urban Cinema
References
4: Critique
The Fallen Guardian
Spatial Illusions
Notes on Critique
References
5: RoboCop
Alex Murphy, the Perfect Cop
Violence Work and the Formation of the Dangerous Class
Labour and Automation in Detroit
From Detroit to Delta City
References
6: Minority Report
Chief John Anderton
Sprawling City, Splintered Space
PreCrime
References
7: Batman
Batman, the Vigilante Counterinsurgent
A Prison City
‘Mass’ Incarceration
References
8: Blade Runner
Officer KD6-3.7
Manufactured Dystopia
Retirement Divisions
References
9: Conclusion
Overview
Crime Control, Cinema, and the Ideology of Repression
References
INDEX