Photo de l'auteur

Elliott Leyton (1939–2022)

Auteur de Hunting Humans: The Rise of the Modern Multiple Murderer

13+ oeuvres 285 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Elliott Leyton is a professor of anthropology at Memorial University in St. John's, Newfoundland.

Comprend les noms: Elliot Leyton, Elliott Leyton

Œuvres de Elliott Leyton

Oeuvres associées

Dance with the Devil: A Memoir of Murder and Loss (2007) — Avant-propos — 85 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1939
Date de décès
2022-02-14
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Canada
Lieu de naissance
Leader, Saskatchewan, Canada
Lieu du décès
St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
Lieux de résidence
Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Warsaw, Poland
Israel
Études
University of British Columbia (BA)
University of British Columbia (MA)
University of Toronto (PhD|Anthropology)
Professions
social anthropologist
university professor emeritus
Organisations
Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association
Agent
Beverley Slopen Literary Agency
Courte biographie
Dr. Elliott Leyton is the past President of the Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association; the author/editor of eleven books and many essays in the scholarly journals; Research Fellow at The Queen's University of Belfast in Ireland, sometime lecturer on homicide at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police College in Ottawa, and the National Police College in Poland, as well as visitor at the FBI Academy; and has held permanent and visiting faculty appointments at The Queen's University of Belfast in N. Ireland, the University of Toronto, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the University of Warsaw in Poland, and the Memorial University of Newfoundland where he is currently Professor Emeritus of anthropology.

He has devoted most of his career to the anthropological study of 'social problems' in modern complex societies. During this time, he has completed fieldwork among business people in Vancouver; with Protestant and Catholic communities in Northern Ireland; among dying miners and widows in Newfoundland; with juvenile delinquents in an Atlantic 'reform school'; with Scotland Yard and South Yorkshire police in Britain; and among Medecins sans Frontieres/Doctors Without Borders emergency medical personnel in Rwanda and Kenya. In 2004, the National Film Board film about his life's work, The Man Who Studies Murder, was premiered at the Montreal Film Festival, and then aired on national CBC Television's THE NATURE OF THINGS as a two-part "mini-series".

http://aorpresents.com/dr-elliott-ley...

Membres

Critiques

Disappointing.
I must be the unusual resident of Canada; I'm uninterested in most of what happens in the land that lies mostly just to the south of this one. When I saw that Leyton is Canadian, working in a Canadian university, I jumped to the conclusion that his discussion would range farther than the confines of the United States. Beyond that, I did not expect to read about 300 pages of descriptions of crimes larded with his moral condemnations of the perpetrators and rehashed pop psych followed by a meagre 100 pages or so of lite analysis.
Dreary reading.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
wbell539 | 2 autres critiques | Dec 22, 2021 |
The back cover of this book made it seem like one of those trashy, tabloidesque true crime books I don't care for, and I hesitated to read it. I'm glad I did anyway, because Sole Survivor turned out to be much more serious and sober in tone than I expected. The author presents a series of case studies, mainly from the 1970s, of children who murdered their whole families (or almost their whole families; sometimes there were survivors). Besides covering the homicides themselves and their immediate aftermath, he delves into a social history of each family. His argument is that these familiacides (his term) occur because the family, often struggling to rise in socioeconomic status, puts unbearable pressure on the child until his/her entire identity is lost, and by killing the family the child is simply trying to assert themselves as an individual.

I'm still not sure what I think of Leyton's theory, but I found this book to be quite interesting and thought-provoking. My copy is from 1992; I wonder if later editions include more recent examples.

(Oh, I should note here that the title means "children" in the sense of "offspring." Only one of the murderers in this book was actually a minor child at the time of the killing; all the others were young adults.)
… (plus d'informations)
2 voter
Signalé
meggyweg | Apr 2, 2010 |
Although this book is valuable for its analysis of some not-all-that-famous multiple murderers (Carl Panzram and Charles Starkweather for example), I found its argument to be complete... well... bull. The author basically said serial and mass murderers were striking back against the economic and social hierarchies in American society by their choice of victims, that the killers were attacking the middle class which they had been unable to enter themselves.

I'm sure that can be considered a partial explanation for some multiple murderers' behavior, but it certainly isn't everything, and I thought the author disregarded a lot of evidence that did not fit his theory. I mean, to begin with, not all serial killers are poor or low-class; some are born into wealth (Charles Ng) or become wealthy through their own efforts (John Wayne Gacy made a great living as a contractor for awhile; ditto Christopher Wilder) and kept killing the whole time.

The reader should also be aware that this is much more an anthropology book than true crime (the author is an anthropologist after all). If you're looking for gore, watch a slasher film. If you're looking for in depth personal stories about the killers or victims, go read Ann Rule. This is an academic kind of book -- not a bad book at all, but not as good as it could have been, and not what it was presented as.
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
meggyweg | 2 autres critiques | Mar 4, 2009 |
Thanks to the problems with amazon details of this edition were lost. I do have a copy but it is in one of the boxes in my house somewhere. I did find the cover on my hard disk. Now I need to figure out how many pages. I remember it was a small book.Anyone? Otherwise I will just guess a number till I find my book. I hate seeing 0 pages.
 
Signalé
Marlene-NL | 2 autres critiques | Apr 12, 2013 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
13
Aussi par
1
Membres
285
Popularité
#81,815
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
5
ISBN
38
Langues
1

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