Francesca Biagi-Chai 's book - a translation from the French of
Le Cas Landru - tackles the issue of criminal responsibility in the
case of serial killers, and other 'mad' people who are nonetheless
deemed to be answerable before the law. The author, a Lacanian
psychoanalyst and senior psychiatrist in France, with extensive
experience working in institutional settings, analyses the logic
informing the crimes of famous serial killers. Addressing the
Landru case (which was the inspiration for Chaplin's Monsieur
Verdoux), as well as those of Pierre Rivi re and Donato Bilancia,
Biagi-Chai casts light on the confusion that pervades forensic
psychiatry and criminal law as to the distinction between mental
illness and madness . She then elaborates the consequences of her
argument in a sustained critique of the insanity defence. The book
includes a Foreword by the renowned psychoanalyst, Jacques-Alain
Miller, and an introduction by the translators on the question of
insanity before the law in the US and in the UK, which considers
the pertinence of Biagi-Chai 's argument for forensic psychiatry,
for criminal law, and for the increasing contemporary focus on the
assessment of dangerousness and risk-management strategies in crime
control practices.
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