In a new article, Simon Cross representations of crime and responsibility in British tabloids.
He notes that the tabloid press is the section of the British media that has mobilized most vehemently on crime and responsibility.
The logic of the tabloids is to sensationalize
crime whilst insisting that criminals are morally responsible for their
actions. However, this logic is thwarted when offenders are insane. The
solution for British tabloids has been to
invoke the illogical notion that mentally disordered offenders are mad
and bad. The article argues for the need to understand this tabloid
heuristic in relation to the politics of mental health care in the
community policy in the 1990s, and the politics of tabloid populism.
Tabloid reporting on the ‘mad and bad’ is further
illustrated in the case of offenders housed in England’s top-security
Broadmoor Hospital. By identifying hypocrisy in tabloid reporting on
Broadmoor patients, the article concludes that British tabloid logic
should be viewed as pathological.
Cross, S. (forthcoming) ‘Mad and Bad Media: Populism and Pathology in the British Tabloids’. To appear in
European Journal of Communication.