Ghostly Collaboration: the Authorship of False Criminal Confession

Authors

  • Mary Laughlin North Dakota State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v3i2.1088

Keywords:

collaborative authorship, criminal confession, language, the autonomous author

Abstract

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.

Author Biography

Mary Laughlin, North Dakota State University

Mary Laughlin is a PhD Candidate at North Dakota State University. Presently she is at work on her dissertation, an investigation of coercive influences on textual productions situated within multiple scenes of collaborative writing. Her research interests include composition pedagogy, felt coercion in the writing classroom, and collaborative authorships.

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Published

2014-11-28

How to Cite

Laughlin, M. (2014). Ghostly Collaboration: the Authorship of False Criminal Confession. uthorship, 3(2). https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v3i2.1088

Issue

Section

Articles