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Journal Article

Citation

Youngs D, Canter DV. Int. J. Offender Ther. Comp. Criminol. 2013; 57(3): 289-311.

Affiliation

University of Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0306624X11434577

PMID

22247223

Abstract

The study of narrative processes as part of the immediate factors that shape criminal action is limited by the lack of a methodology for differentiating the narrative themes that characterise specific crime events. The current study explores how the roles offenders see themselves as playing during an offence encapsulate their underlying crime narratives and thus provide the basis for a quantitative methodology. To test this possibility, a 33-item Narrative Roles Questionnaire (NRQ) was developed from intensive interviews with offenders about their experience of committing a recent offence. A multidimensional analysis of the NRQ completed by 71 convicted offenders revealed life narrative themes similar to those identified in fiction by Frye and with noncriminals by McAdams, labelled The Professional, Victim, Hero, and Revenger offence roles. The NRQ thus is a first step in opening up the possibility of empirical studies of the narrative aetiological perspective in criminology.


Language: en

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