2008 MM Present US-Cinema and the Death Penalty
Thursday, May 29, 20.45, my place, Tannenkampstr. 12 The Player (1992) (you supply drink, I'll supply food), --Olaf Simons 11:24, 14 May 2008 (CEST) |
- Fr 14 - 16
- A10 1-121a
- Olaf Simons
- Mastermodul Klausurvorbereitend: American Studies
The implementation of the death penalty is one of the major cultural differences between the US and Europe today. A number of movies have over the past two decades dealt with, if not effectively fuelled, the public controversy about capital punishment. The seminar will analyse and discuss some of these films against the background of the present debate and in a comparison with movies in which vigilante or self-administered justice and poetic justice create a form of capital punishment - more or less provocatively - beyond the reach of the public debate.
Contents
- 1 April 11: Introduction
- 2 April 18: Emotional imbalances: Dead Man Walking (1995)
- 3 April 25: The reception of Dead Man Walking (1995)
- 4 May 2: Truth and fiction
- 5 May 5: The dark side
- 6 May 16: Rescheduling the Course, Ideas for individual seminar papers discussed
- 7 May 23: Human rights activists on trial?
- 8 May 30: Hollywood on trial
- 9 June 6: Is there a Genre of Execution Row Movies?
- 10 June 13: European Perspectives: Lars von Trier's "Dancer In The Dark"
- 11 June 20: Religion and the Death Penalty
- 12 June 27: 27.06. Vigilantism
- 13 July 4: Brave One
- 14 July 11: Final session
- 14.1 Topics
- 14.2 Films in which the death penalty plays a major role
- 14.3 Films in which self-administered justice becomes a major topic
- 14.4 Films in which the accidental death of the criminal reestablishes a higher justice
- 14.5 Documentary films (German/additional/available at the university library)
- 14.6 Literature
- 14.7 Further reading (available at the library)
- 14.8 Links
April 11: Introduction
Discussion of the seminar plan and modes of participation.
April 18: Emotional imbalances: Dead Man Walking (1995)
- Dead Man Walking (1995)
Plot line, emotional balance, sympathies and how they are created, political messages.
April 25: The reception of Dead Man Walking (1995)
Wednesday, 23, 2008, 20:45 my place, Tannenkampstr. 12: Krzysztof Kieslowski, Ein kurzer Film über das Töten (Poland 1988) German wikipedia
Course preparation
Dead Man Walking (1995) as an influential film - debates it managed to raise, debates which just joined the ongoing debate. We need a presentation on the reception history of the film (worth an ensuing seminar paper).
We will have three short presentations on the death penalty focussing on its more ore less "humane" modalities
- Antje + Marie Katrin: A historical perspective. Background: Michel Foucault Discipline and Punish (1975). See wikipedia on the subject and read the first pages of the book which should be available in the library (you may refer to the German translation Überwachen und Strafen). Another good book on the subject is Cesare Beccaria's (1738-1794) Of Crimes and Punishments, available on the web in English: Of Crimes and Punishments (1764).
- Philipp promised to take a look at the present US-debate - a good starting point is again wikipedia where you will find a chapter on methods used in the US.
- Jochen: will take a look at the general debate of humane executions. A good starting point are the links you get if you google Michael Portillo on the subject [1]
All others are requested to take a look at the reception of the film and to feed their information into this page: Dead Man Walking (USA 1995). Give your link and a summary of your result. We should get an idea of the debate the film was able to produce to then compare this debate with the debate we had in class.
May 2: Truth and fiction
- Dead Man Walking (1995)
- Redemption: The Stan Tookie Williams Story (2004)
Both films dealt with actual cases. Was this link to reality important? How was it used in the film and in the ensuing debate?
Some Links:
- http://www.tookie.com/tookie_fact_sheet_10.18.05.pdf
- http://da.co.la.ca.us/pdf/swilliams.pdf
- http://www.savetookie.org/ // http://www.tookie.com/
- Snoop Dogg at San Quentin Prison speaking on Tookie http://de.youtube.com/watch?v=qASQBKwngsE&feature=related
- --Sonja Büsing 13:30, 02.05.2008
May 5: The dark side
- Monster’s Ball (2001)
- Identity (2003)
- The Green Mile (1999)
The capital punishment seems to have a dark side - how is this dark side connected with the general appeal of the death penalty?
Dear Participants of my Seminar on Capital Punishment in US Movies,
I still have not quite made up my mind about how we should proceed. I wanted to see a larger number of these films to get an idea of the "genre" - if one can speak of such a genre.
...and I think one can. People have ideas about what a movie of "this kind" should include. The advertising material for Monster's Ball proves the existence of the genre by denying that this film fits into it. Last Dance on the other hand blatantly exploits the genre conventions (of which I'd like to have the clearer picture) - at times Last Dance is almost a copy of Dead Man Walking though with reversed roles.
- Option one: We take a look into Last Dance - the debate might be flat at the moment, it might circle around Dead Man Walking as the movie with which one will compare the film.
- Option two: We take another look at Green Mile - I had a problem with the video projector last time and would make sure that we won't have the same problem again. Contra-indication here: It might be difficult to get an interesting discussion, since I did not plan two sessions with distinct topics before hand. I still have my own questions - yet I realised it is difficult to give them momentum: I am intrigued about this kind of magic realism. It makes me feel uneasy. I have spent some thoughts on this uneasiness over the weekend and realised it is a general problem I have with materials which want to be interpreted. It is the role of the intended interpretation per se which makes me ask for a cultural theory of such materials and their potentials (a difficult topic).
- Option three: We change the plan an move on to David Gale for next session. As you know I did not like the film - wondering whether it does not blatantly discredit the movement of human rights activists opposing capital punishment. I would offer an option to watch the movie at my place tomorrow, Thursday, 20.45 pm.
The reshuffling of the schedule could give us a chance to directly move on to Robert Altman's film and to use the questions Altman asks for the more interesting debate of Last Dance and True Crime in the ensuing sessions.
I am slightly in favour of option three - need, however, your consent to prepare David Gale for Friday.
I am also still waiting for the clearer picture of your personal plans of seminar-work. The seminar will not become interesting if you do not turn it into the platform on which you take your first steps into the works you intend to write. I want you to use the seminar to test observations and ideas and to get feedback from your colleagues,
best, --Olaf Simons 11:07, 14 May 2008 (CEST)
- PS Last Dance would (if we took option three) become part of three sessions circling around Altman's film. A Time to Kill would move into the self administered justice section. True Crime and Dirty Harry would move closer together.
- I'd prefer option three just because I didn't like the "Green Mile" too much. Heard quite a lot about "David Gale" and would like to see it. (Marie-Ann Mowka)
- David Gale would be okay, although I'd like to further discuss The Green Mile, as well. However, maybe we should discuss the further outline of the seminar in the next session, which would give us the possibility to shift the postion of some films... --Bastian Martens 11:21, 15 May 2008 (CEST)
- I think we should catch up with the "Green Mile" material we were up to watch last week and then continue with "David Gale". (Raimund Teske)
- I agree with Raimund
May 16: Rescheduling the Course, Ideas for individual seminar papers discussed
- Andrea Kröger: Vigilantism. (See also the film list at en.wikipedia
- Jochen Berkowsky: Lars von Trier, Dancer in the Dark en.wikipedia - a European perspective on capital punishment in the USA.
- Philipp Kreutzer, The Life of David Gale (2003) - Public reception
- Anna Rozwadowska, Vigilantism.
Hauke Uterhark proposed to add David Fincher's Seven (1995) en.wikipedia to our selection of vigilantism films.
May 23: Human rights activists on trial?
- The Life of David Gale (2003)
The Life of David Gale (2003) is probably the worst movie on the list - worth examining as a questionable item. Philipp promised a Thesenpapier (questions he will ask in his seminar paper, views he would try to prove, ideas how he might prove what he would like to prove...) --Olaf Simons 13:26, 17 May 2008 (CEST)
May 30: Hollywood on trial
- The Player (1992)
Invites a reevaluation of the films we have seen so far.
Additional Screening: Wednesday 5/28/08, Brandsweg 25, 8 p.m., Hagemann (movie will be there, bring what you need) Jochen & Jens
(Anna Rozwadowska) Hi everybody. I am interested in an additional screening "session" because I can´t come on thursday; who else is? I would prefer wednesday evening. I can offer my place (which is Tannenkampstr. 31) if there is no other possible place to meet. But: somebody would have to bring the film :)
June 6: Is there a Genre of Execution Row Movies?
- Central film: Last Dance (1996)
Last Dance has a number of scenes which seem to recall Dead Man Walking. Clint Esastwood's True Crime is another good candidate for a film produced against the backdrop of genre conventions.
Isabelle promised a talk on the question of arguments and emotions.
June 13: European Perspectives: Lars von Trier's "Dancer In The Dark"
Lars von Trier, Dancer in the Dark (2000) en.wikipedia
Jochen Berkowsky will offer a presentation.
June 20: Religion and the Death Penalty
- Central Film: David Fincher Seven (1995)
Religion was a topic throughout the semester: Dead Man Walking portrayed sister Helen Prejean taking care of a man sentenced to death. Green Mile could be interpreted as religious allegory. Eastwood's True Crime has an interesting confrontation here - and a script which can be understood as deciding the case.
Seven - the central film of the session - is already a film on vigilantism and hence a good option to bridge the topics.
June 27: 27.06. Vigilantism
- A Time to Kill (1996)
Topic and session need more consideration. Andrea promised a talk on a TV-series I have not seen.
July 4: Brave One
- The Brave One (2007) directed by Neil Jordan, starring Jodie Foster. A mayhem victim avenges the death of her husband under the protection of the police officer who is supposed to solve the case. www.thebraveone.warnerbros.com IMDb
July 11: Final session
Look back on the seminar and my feedback on the seminar evaluation.
Topics
Background information
- The history of the death penalty and Foucault's work.
- The legal status in the US
- Pro and contra: interest groups
- The question of method - from electrocution to the lethal injection - what is the function of the debate?
- Religion and the death penalty
Seminar papers
Be creative! And open a special section on the Discussion page to give outlines of topics you are interested in.
Films in which the death penalty plays a major role
- Execution (2007) directed by Steven Scaffidi. In the year 1995 two filmmakers gained access to death row and filmed the final seven days of a man before he got executed. The Warden confiscated the film footage, but ten years later the filmmakers get the film footage back. You can see some pictures and a trailor on www.executionfilm.com (Andrea)
- Redemption: The Stan Tookie Williams Story (2004) (TV) Film directed by Vondie Curtis-Hall and starring Jamie Foxx. The film is based on the true story of Stan "Tookie" Williams, founder of the "Crips", a street gang in L.A. He was accused of murder, prisoned and executed. While in Death Row, he started writing children's novels, which earned him Nobel Peace Prize nominations. IMDb
- The Life of David Gale (2003) directed by Alan Parker, starring Kate Winslet and Kevin Spacey. An acitivist against the death penalty is accused of murdering a fellow activist and is sentenced to death. While he is in prison, he tells his story to a reporter in flashbacks. http://www.thelifeofdavidgale.com/ IMDb
- Monster (2003) directed by Patty Jenkins Adapting the true story of female serial killer Aileen Wuornos, a former prostitute who was executed in 2002 for killing seven men in the late 1980s and early 1990s. IMDb not ordered for library
- Monster’s Ball (2001) directed by Marc Foster, starring Oscar-Winner Halle Barry and Billy Bob Thornton. Thornton plays a racist prison guard who falls in love with the wife of the last prisoner he executed and reexamines his own attitudes. IMDb
- The Green Mile (1999) directed by Frank Darabont, starring Tom Hanks and Micheal Clarke Duncan. The lives of prison guards leading the condemned prisoners to their executions, one of them went to prison on false accusation. http://thegreenmile.warnerbros.com/ IMDb
- True Crime (1999) directed by Clint Eastwood, based on Andrew Klavan's novel, who also wrote the screenplay. Frank Beachum was sentenced to death but claims to be innocent. Steve Everett played by Eastwood is a journalist who attempts to find the truth about the murder. www.truecrimethemovie.com IMDb
- Last Dance (1996) directed by Bruce Beresford. IMDb
- Dead Man Walking (1995) directed by Tim Robbins, starring Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn. IMDb
- The Player (1992) directed by Robert Altman using a screenplay by Michael Tolkin based on his own novel. IMDb
Films in which self-administered justice becomes a major topic
- Death Sentence (2007) A drama directed by James Wan. With Kevin Bacon, John Goodman and Kelly Preston. An executive witnesses a crime that changes his life. He wants to protect his family and seeks revenge. www.executionfilm.com IMDb
- The Brave One (2007) directed by Neil Jordan, starring Jodie Foster. A mayhem victim avenges the death of her husband under the protection of the police officer who is supposed to solve the case. www.thebraveone.warnerbros.com IMDb
- The Punisher (2004) directed by Jonathan Hensleigh. After his wife and family are killed, Frank Castle takes it upon himself to distribute punishment to those responsible for the vendetta. www.punishermovie.com IMDb
- Double Jeopardy (1999) directed by Bruce Beresford, starring Ashley Judd and Tommy Lee Jones. An innocent woman is sentenced to death for the murder of her husband. While in prison, she discovers that her husband is still alive and that he and her best friend betrayed her. After her release on probation, she wants to take revenge; based on the American law that a person cannot be re-accused of the same crime. IMDb
- A Time to Kill (1996) based on the novel written by John Grisham. A father takes revenge on the rapists of his daughter. IMDb
- Dirty Harry (1971) with its sequels which handle the topic of vigilante justice in variations till The Dead Pool (1988).
Films in which the accidental death of the criminal reestablishes a higher justice
Documentary films (German/additional/available at the university library)
- Dubois, Jean-Paul. Henker erzählen: Todesstrafe in den USA. Frankreich, 2004. Fernsehmitschnitt Sw: USA. Fernsehmitschnitt: WDR, 22.10.2004. (VHS, farb., 50 Min.) (Dokumentation über Henker in den USA, die sich kritisch mit ihrer Arbeit und der Todesstrafe auseinandersetzen)
- Kessel, Julie von. The Innocence Project. Deutschland, 2002. Fernsehmitschnitt: Arte, 03.12.2002. (VHS, farb., 20 Min.) (Bericht über ein DNA-Projekt der New Yorker Columbia University, das sich mit Schuld oder Unschuld zum Tode Verurteilter beschäftigt.)
- Steinberg, Klaus; Bock, Astrid. Leben mit der Hinrichtung: Begegnungen im Todestrakt. Deutschland, 1997. Fernsehmitschnitt: ZDF (37 Grad), 12.08.1997. (VHS, farb., 30 Min.') (Bericht über zum Tode verurteilte Häftlinge in den USA.)
- Walwin, Kent; Trombley, Stephen [Reg.]. L 'état meurtrier = Der Staat als Mörder. Deutschland/Frankreich, 1996. Fernsehmitschnitt: ARTE, 21.3.1996, 20,45 Uhr. (VHS, Zweikanalton, Monospur dt., farb., 75 Min.) (Auseinandersetzung um die Todesstrafe vom Ursprung bis zur heutigen Praxis in den USA)
- Hoewijk, Jaap van. Procedure 769: a hanging. Niederlande, 1995. Fernsehmitschnitt: West 3, 15.4.1996, 23,00 Uhr. (VHS, farb., 80 Min) (Der Film geht der Frage nach, warum Angehörige des Täters und der Opfer von Robert A. Harris dessen Hinrichtung beiwohnten.)
- Leacock, Richard; Pennebaker, Don Alan. The chair = Der Stuhl. Monospur dt., Stereospur engl. USA, 1963. Fernsehmitschnitt: Arte, 18.10.1996. (VHS, s/w, 75 Min.) (Documentary about the death sentence.)
- Reinhold, Frank. Take care = Gib auf dich acht! Deutschland, 1997. Fernsehmitschnitt: ARTE, 10.6.1997. (VHS, Zweikanalton, Monospur dt., Stereospur franz., farb., 60 Min.) (Die Liebesgeschichte zwischen dem in den USA zum Tode verurteilten Schwarzen Arthur Lee Williams und einer Deutschen von Amnesty International.)
Literature
MLA on "Death Penalty", "Capital Punishment", "Execution", "The Player"
2007
- Tolkin, Michael. "[Fiction into Film.]" BookForum: The Review for Art, Fiction, & Culture, 14:2 (2007 June-Aug), pp. 36-37. [Subject Terms: American literature; 1900-1999; Tolkin, Michael (1950-): The Player (1988); novel; film adaptation; by Altman, Robert (1925-2006).]
2006
- O'Shea, Kathleen. Killing the Killers: Women on Death Row in the United States. pp. 67-82. Burfoot, Annette (ed. and introd.) Lord, Susan (ed. and introd.). Killing Women: The Visual Culture of Gender and Violence Cultural Studies Series. 6. Waterloo, ON: Wilfred Laurier UP, 2006. xxii, 328 pp. (Book article) [Subject Terms: Dramatic arts; television; in United States; 1998; treatment of women murderers; religious conversion; relationship to capital punishment; social conventions; of femininity; objectification.]
2005
- George, Diana and Shoos, Diane. "Deflecting the Political in the Visual Images of Execution and the Death Penalty Debate". College English, 67:6 (2005 July), pp. 587-609. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: Dramatic arts; film; treatment of capital punishment; compared to photographs; of lynching; relationship to witness; voyeurism.]
- Poirot, Valérie. Cinéma et engagement: Représentations de la peine de mort et images d'exécution dans les productions américaines et françaises. Dissertation Abstracts International, Section A: The Humanities and Social Sciences, 66:3 (2005 Sept), p. 798. (Dissertation abstract) [Subject Terms: Dramatic arts; film; in France; United States; 1970-1999; treatment of execution.]
- Reinelt, Janelle. "The Ambivalence of Catholic Compassion". Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, 20:1 (2005 Fall), pp. 103-12. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: American literature; 1900-1999; Prejean, Helen (1939-): Dead Man Walking (1993); prose; treatment of capital punishment; relationship to Christianity.]
- Schuyler, Michael T. "'Traffic Was a Bitch': Gender, Race and Spectatorship in Robert Altman's The Player." Journal of Narrative Theory, 35:2 (2005 Summer), pp. 218-47. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: Dramatic arts; film; treatment of women; blacks; relationship to spectator; in Altman, Robert (1925-2006): The Player (1992).]
2003
- Horeck, Tanya. "From Documentary to Drama: Capturing Aileen Wuornos." Screen, 48:2 (2007 Summer), pp. 141-59. [Treatment of Wuornos, Aileen (1956-2002); women murderers; capital punishment; in Broomfield, Nicholas (1948-) and Churchill, Joan: Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer (2003) compared to Jenkins, Patty (1971-): Monster (2003).] see: en.wikipedia.org
- Goldsmith, David F. "Monster." Creative Screenwriting, 11:1 (2004 Jan-Feb), pp. 30-31. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: Dramatic arts; film; film genres; crime film; treatment of prostitute; sexual abuse; relationship to revenge; capital punishment; in Jenkins, Patty: Monster (2003).]
- Meranze, Michael. "Michel Foucault, the Death Penalty and the Crisis of Historical Understanding." Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques, 29:2 (2003 Summer), pp. 191-209. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: French literature; 1900-1999; Foucault, Michel (1926-1984): L'Histoire de la sexualité (1976); History of Sexuality: "Il faut défendre la société"; prose; treatment of capital punishment; relationship to war; race; power.]
- Parker, Alan. "Gale Force: My Personal Journey to a Death Row Drama." Film Journal International, 106:2 (2003 Feb), p. 12, 30. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: Dramatic arts; film; treatment of capital punishment; in Parker, Alan (1944-): The Life of David Gale (2003); interview.]
1999
- Neubert, Ingo. "Sichtweisen des Fremden: Der amerikanische Dokumentarfilm und das Lernziel interkultureller Kompetenz: Dargestellt an der Direct-Cinema-Produktion The Chair zur Situation der Todesstrafe in den USA." Anglistik und Englischunterricht, 62 (1999), pp. 407-30. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: Dramatic arts; film; film genres; documentary film; treatment of capital punishment; in Drew, Robert L. (1924-): The Chair (1962).]
- Prédal, René. "The Player ou la mort du scénariste," pp. 127-47. Estève, Michel (ed. and introd.). Robert Altman. Paris, France: Minard, 1999. 209 pp. [Subject Terms: American literature; 1900-1999; Tolkin, Michael (1950-): The Player (1988); novel; intertextuality; plot; relationship to Hollywood; in screenplay; for film adaptation; by Altman, Robert (1925-).]
- Stoekl, Allan. "Execution and the Human." Intertexts, 3:1 (1999 Spring), pp. 3-31. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: American literature; 1900-1999; Dick, Philip K. (1928-1982): Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968); novel; treatment of capital punishment; murder; human condition; in Scott, Ridley (1938-): Blade Runner (1982) as film adaptation compared to Kant, Immanuel (1724-1804): Metaphysische Anfangsgründe der Rechtslehre.]
1998
- Lauritzen, Paul. "The Knowing Heart: Moral Argument and the Appeal to Experience". Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 81:1-2 (1998 Spring-Summer), pp. 213-34. (Journal article) [Subject Terms: American literature; 1900-1999; Prejean, Helen (1939-): Dead Man Walking (1993); prose; treatment of capital punishment; relationship to morality; experience.]
1997
- Guest, David. Sentenced to Death: The American Novel and Capital Punishment. Jackson, MS: UP of Mississippi, 1997. xx, 179 pp. (Book) [Subject Terms: American literature; 1900-1999; novel; treatment of capital punishment.]
- Nayman, Ira. "The Adaptable Altman." Creative Screenwriting, 4:3 (1997 Fall), pp. 84-96. [Subject Terms: American literature; 1900-1999; Chandler, Raymond (1888-1959): The Long Goodbye (1954); novel; and Tolkin, Michael (1950-): The Player (1988); Carver, Raymond (1936-1988); role of film adaptation; by Altman, Robert (1925-).]
1994
- Danziger, Marie. "Basic Instinct: Grappling for Post-Modern Mind Control." Literature/Film Quarterly, 22:1 (1994), pp. 7-10. [Subject Terms: Dramatic arts; film; treatment of power; in Verhoeven, Paul (1938-): Basic Instinct (1992); Altman, Robert (1925-2006): The Player (1992)]
- Pilipp, Frank. "Satirizing Hollywood: The Self-Referentiality of Robert Altman's The Player: Co-Sponsored by the Virginia Humanities Conf. and the Virginia Center for Media and Culture," pp. 80-84. Schwartz, Joel (introd.). Proceedings of the Conference on Film and American Culture. Williamsburg: Roy R. Charles Center, College of William and Mary, 1994. 111 pp.
1992
- Richolson, Janice. "The Player: An Interview with Robert Altman." Cineaste: America's Leading Magazine on the Art and Politics of the Cinema,' 19:2-3 (1992), p. 61.
Further reading (available at the library)
- Amnesty International. Todesstrafe in den USA. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verlag, 1989.
- Bedau, Hugo A. [Hrsg.] Capital punishment in the United States. New York, N.Y.: AMS Press, 1976. ISBN 0-404-10325-1
- Martschukat, Jürgen. Geschichte der Todesstrafe in Nordamerika: von der Kolonialzeit bis zur Gegenwart. 1. Ed. München: Beck, 2002. ISBN 3-406-47611-2 (Pb.)
- Sarat, Austin. When the State Kills: Capital Punishment and the American Condition. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2001. (not available at the library)
- Sarat, Austin. Crime and punishment: perspectives from the humanities. Vol. 37. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2005. ISBN 0-7623-1245-9 (hbk.)
- Sarat, Austin. Punishment politics and culture. Vol. 30. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2004. ISBN 0-7623-1072-3
- Schwed, Roger E. Abolition and capital punishment: the United States' judicial, political, and moral barometer. New York, N.Y.: AMS Press, 1983. ISBN 0-404-61623-2
Fiction (additional)
- John Grisham, The Chamber. New York: Doubleday, 1994.
- Victor Hugo, The Last Day of a Condemned Man [1829]. London: Hesperus Press Ltd., 2002.
Links
- www.film.com Movie Trailers and Times, Reviews and Previews, Celebreties, TV, DVD etc.
- Cinemasense Study material on cinematic techniques, including a word search for cinematic terms, which are explained and illustrated by film stills.
- nitpickers.com Movie mistakes, movie errors, movie reviews.
- Cinematic Terms - A Film-Making Glossary Study material on cinematic terms explained and illustrated by examples.
- Capital punishment in the United States - en.wikipedia.org
- deathpenaltyinfo.org Including a List of Articles and a List of Books on the Death Penalty.
- deathpenalty.org "The Death Penalty Focus", an organization against the Death Penalty founded in 1988.
- deathpenaltycurriculum.org/states/maps Interactive U.S. maps on the Death Penalty, including methods of execution, homicides and use of the death penalty, and execution on death row inmates (all by state).
- deathpenalty.org/pdf_files/curriculum A pdf file showing suggested lesson plans for teachers. Including case studies, material on discussions, exams and essays, history of the Death Penalty, laws, international views and a suggested general reading list.
- Jonsson, Patrick. "Is self-defence law vigilante justice?". The Christian Science Monitor Feb. 24 2003 <http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0224/p02s01-usju.html>
- Guarnera, Daniel. "Hard to Kill: Why Can’t the U.S. Find a Suitable Execution Method?". International Review Jan. 4 2007 <http://www.internationalistreview.com/article.php?id=52>
- The Simpsons 13x21 The Frying Game Fun Stuff: An episode of "The Simpsons" showing Homer and Marge being accused of murder and sentenced to death, but before Homer's execution on the electric chair, it is revealed that they are actually in a TV-Show called "Frame Up". The episode 'criticises' (in the Simpsons manner) the Realtity Show that presents the Death Penalty as a show for a TV audience. In addition, there is a short reference to "Dead Man Walking" and "The Green Mile".