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"Speaking of Murder"invents true-crime "media autopsy" Bonnie Bucqueroux' new book dissects the media coverage of three famous crime cases: the Fatty Arbuckle "murder" trials, the Kitty Genovese case where neighbors heard her being killed but did nothing and Truman Capote's creation of the non-fiction novel "In Cold Blood" about the Clutter murders in Kansas. Author Bonnie Bucqueroux' new book Speaking of Murder: Media Autopsies of Famous Crime Cases dissects three famous crime cases through the lens of their media coverage. "A media autopsy looks at the role of the media in helping or hindering efforts to bring justice to the accused, as well as to the victims and their families and to the community," says Bucqueroux, a faculty member at Michigan State University's School of Journalism where she previously served as coordinator of the Victims and the Media Program. In Volume One, Bucqueroux conducts media autopsies on three famous cases from the past:
"Speaking of Murder"invents true-crime "media autopsy" Bonnie Bucqueroux' new book dissects the media coverage of three famous crime cases: the Fatty Arbuckle "murder" trials, the Kitty Genovese case where neighbors heard her being killed but did nothing and Truman Capote's creation of the non-fiction novel "In Cold Blood" about the Clutter murders in Kansas. Author Bonnie Bucqueroux' new book Speaking of Murder: Media Autopsies of Famous Crime Cases dissects three famous crime cases through the lens of their media coverage. "A media autopsy looks at the role of the media in helping or hindering efforts to bring justice to the accused, as well as to the victims and their families and to the community," says Bucqueroux, a faculty member at Michigan State University's School of Journalism where she previously served as coordinator of the Victims and the Media Program. In Volume One, Bucqueroux conducts media autopsies on three famous cases from the past:
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