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| Home : American History
: 20th Century |
| AMERICAN
HISTORY : 20th Century |
1970's
The nineteen-seventies was an incredible decade. It was a decade of
change, one of freedom, a time for great music. It was also an incredible
decade for shock, fear and serial killers. John Wayne Gacy, an amateur
clown, was a pedophiliac homosexual. He tortured and killed thirty three
little boys and stored their remains under his house. David Berkowitz,
a.k.a. the Son of Sam, stalked New York City from nineteen-sixty-seven
to nineteen-seventy-seven. He claimed to have been following a voice from
his dog that told him when and where to kill. Ted Bundy, who is believed
to have killed at least thirty-four people, was charged for only three
under his own defense- and in fact, he was commended by the judge for his
own defense. He was put to death.
With the combination of a very powerful media and a society fascinated
with gruesome, sadistic crimes, modern serial killers have been put in
the spotlight. We are enraptured with serial killers so much, that we pay
seven dollars to go see a movie where everyone except the bad guys gets
strangled, mutilated, or shot- and enjoy it in some sick way. The media
goes out of its way to glamorize murder and terrify the public. We support
killers like Charles Manson on Death Row with our tax dollars. In fact,
we support them with more than that. About two months ago there was an
art show in California entitled: The Death Row Art Show III. Pieces sold
for thousands of dollars regardless of their aesthetic appeal, because
of the identity of the artists. Serial killers are becoming as popular
as rock stars.
Serial killers are a development of the industrial world; they really
didn't "come about" until the late eighteen-hundreds when society was becoming
modernized and the threat of the new age sort of displaced some individuals
so much they felt they had to kill to get their point across to society.
Jack the Ripper is probably the most notorious killer in history because
he established the serial killer profile. Ripper set up a pattern for the
new line of mass murderers who would follow in the tradition of a truly
organized killer. He had a sexual obsession with prostitutes that led him
to target complete strangers for a days work. When he was done, he laid
his victim out in a ritualistic manner with various disemboweled items
placed strategically on or around the victim's corpse.
Of course, murder has been around for centuries, committed by under-educated
thieves. No one was interested in meeting, and hearing about a poor peasant
that slit someones throat in a dark alley. But ever since the introduction
of serial killers into our society, with their precision and strategy of
the murder, the media became fascinated with these people, and so did society.
So instead of killing or punishing these horrible people, we now have television
networks arguing over movie rights to the killers story. News shows fighting
to get the "exclusive interview". T-shirts with the killers faces on them(e.g..
the famous "Manson T-shirt"). The only explanation I can offer is that
we are still obsessed with our own mortality, and we always will be. As
long as we die, we'll be fascinated by those who seem to be invincible
from death like, serial killers, Hitler...its almost as is we like to see
the act of death itself, over and over, to observe the exact moment- or
what it is that puts us over that incredible brink between life and death.
I can honestly say I am fascinated with the serial killer. But since
when did we condone the practice of serial killers? Why aren't they put
to death promptly after being convicted, instead of being kept alive for
the media to interview? You have to wonder who is making money in this.
When we allow people like this to dominate our media, it's like we're saying
its all right to murder. Did society and the media forget that the victims
of those serial killers are us and our families? Its not the serial killers
that affected the twentieth century so much, but the spotlight that allowed
them to grow.
Maybe if not for all the attention, there wouldn't of been so many deaths.
There are so many maybes, so many problems. But it all comes down to one
thing, basically, money. The media will do just about anything for money.
When are they going to learn that they have been corrupting the minds and
souls of observers everywhere?
Works Cited
Yofee, Ellen B. "Here Pigs!" Gear October 1995: 10-12
The editors of Time Life Books Serial Killers. Alexandria, Virginia:
Time Life Books, 1992.
The editors of Time Life Books Mass Murderers. Alexandria, Virginia:
Time Life Books, 1992.
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