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Remorse and Psychopathy at the Penalty Phase of the Capital Trial: How Psychiatry's View of "Moral Insanity" Helps Build the Case for Death.

Authors :
Weisman, Richard
Source :
Law & Society. 2007 Annual Meeting, p1. 0p.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

This paper discusses how the shift in psychiatric representation from the 'morally insane' perpetrator of the 19th century to the modern psychopath or person with antisocial personality disorder involves a recasting of the offender from some one afflicted with an illness whose criminal misconduct is merely a symptom of their disorder to someone whose criminal misconduct is perceived as an expression of their true character. Drawing upon recent case law, the paper then shows how prosecutors deploy this modern psychiatric reconfiguring during the penalty phase of the capital trial to persuade jurors to decide in favor of death over life without parole. Central to the building of this narrative is the reframing of what are taken as the offenders' silence or unconvincing attempts to show remorse as evidence of a pathology whose primary manifestation is the incapacity to feel or experience moral emotions. Applying but also modifying Harold Garfinkel's work on degradation ceremonies, the paper shows how the pathologizing of the offender's lack of remorse involves a rite of passage in which he or she is symbolically reconstituted from someone whose life is viewed as worthy in spite of their crime to someone for whom death is the only appropriate penalty. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Law & Society
Publication Type :
Conference
Accession number :
26985270