Ghostly Collaboration: the Authorship of False Criminal Confession

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Laughlin, Mary
In: Authorship, 3, 2014, 2
published:
Ghent University
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
ISSN: 2034-4643
DOI: 10.21825/aj.v3i2.1088
published in: Authorship
Language: Undetermined
Subjects:
Collection: Ghent University (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p>Drawing on a body of confession scholarship, “Ghostly Collaboration” defines “coercive ghostwriting,” an authorship-inspired term for collaborative practices enacted between custodial criminal suspects and professional police interrogators resulting in coerced, potentially false confession. Within the United States, still-prominent notions of a Romantically-influenced autonomous Author problematically intersect with public perception of collaborative texts; the coercive ghostwriting label is intended to draw explicit attention to co-authorship via coercive collaboration, hopefully contributing to the ongoing efforts of researchers working to challenge inaccurate views of false confessions.</jats:p>