Front cover image for Hidden victims : the effects of the death penalty on families of the accused

Hidden victims : the effects of the death penalty on families of the accused

Annotation America is fascinated with murder, as evidenced by the media's elaborate and often sensational coverage of homicides, the plethora of recreated television crime programs-such as America's Most Wanted and Unsolved Mysteries-and the number of high-grossing films and best-selling novels that revolve around murder plots. We love to be afraid and we love to hate offenders. Murderers, particularly those sentenced to death, we consider to be unusually heinous, often sub-human, and entirely different from the rest of us. In Hidden Victims, sociologist Susan F. Sharp challenges this culturally ingrained perspective by reminding us that those individuals facing a death sentence, in addition to being murderers, are brothers or sisters, mothers or fathers, daughters or sons, relatives or friends. Through a series of vivid and in-depth interviews with families of the accused, she demonstrates how the exceptionally severe way in which we view those on death row trickles down to those with whom they are closely connected. Sharp shows how family members and friends-in effect, the indirect victims of the initial crime-experience a profoundly complicated and socially isolating grief process. Departing from a humanist perspective from which most accounts of victims are told, Sharp makes her case from a sociological standpoint that draws out the parallel experiences and coping mechanisms of these individuals. Chapters focus on responses to sentencing, the particular structure of grieving faced by this population, execution, aftermath, wrongful conviction, family formation after conviction, and the complex situation of individuals related to both the killer and the victim. Powerful, poignant, and intelligently written, Hidden Victims challenges all of us-regardless of which side of the death penalty you are on-to understand the economic, social, and psychological repercussions that shape the lives of the often forgotten families of death row inmates
Print Book, English, ©2005
Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, N.J., ©2005
xv, 224 pages ; 24 cm.
9780813535838, 9780813535845, 0813535832, 0813535840
56482297
The death penalty, victims' families, and families of prisoners
Dealing with the horror : "we're sentenced, too"
Trying to cope: withdrawal, anger, and joining
The grief process : denial and horror, the BADD cycle (bargaining, activity, disillusionment and desperation)
Facing the end : families and execution
Aftermath : picking up the pieces
"But he's innocent
" : dealing with wrongful accusations and convictions
Double losers : being both a victim's family member and an offender's family member
Family after the fact : fictive kin and death row marriages
The death penalty and families, revisited