Familicidal Hearts: The
Emotional Styles of 211
by Neil Websdale (Author)
Oscar, physically and
sexually abusive, stabbed his partner and two stepdaughters to death, buried
the bodies, and fled the state with his two younger children. Paul, a respected
investment banker, donned a Halloween mask and shot his wife and two children
before turning the gun on himself. What drives individuals as different as
Oscar and Paul to kill their families? Why does familicide appear to be on the
rise?
In Familicidal Hearts,
award-winning author and sociologist Neil Websdale uncovers the stories behind
196 male and 15 female perpetrators of this shocking offense, situating their emotional
styles on a continuum, from the livid coercive to the civil reputable. With
highly detailed and riveting case studies, Websdale explores the pivotal roles
of shame, rage, fear, anxiety, and depression in the lives and crimes of the
killers. His analysis demonstrates how internal emotional conflict, against a
backdrop of societal pressures, is at the root of familicide, challenging the
widely accepted argument that murderers kill family members to assert power and
control. Websdale contends instead that most perpetrators struggle with intense
shame, many sensing that they failed to live up to the demands of modern gender
prescriptions, as fathers and lovers, wives and mothers. What emerges is a
compelling theory about the haunting effects of modern emotional struggles on
perpetrators, controlling and upstanding alike.
Captivatingly written
and expertly researched, this provocative book weaves a gripping tale of
modern-era "haunted hearts." Blending the social, the historical, and
the emotional into a new way of making sense of a horrific crime, Familicidal
Hearts is a provocative meditation on gender roles, social forces, and modern
life itself.