Acknowledgments |
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xi | |
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1 Introduction: "That's the hardest thing I've ever had to do" |
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1 | (15) |
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The Significance of Language and Death Penalty Juries |
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6 | (4) |
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Is Capital Sentencing a Violent Act? A Potential Irony |
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10 | (2) |
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A Note on Race and the Death Penalty |
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12 | (1) |
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13 | (3) |
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2 Doing Death in Texas: Studying Jurors in the "Death Penalty State" |
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16 | (30) |
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The Death Penalty Schema in Texas |
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16 | (5) |
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State Killing in the United States and Texas |
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21 | (2) |
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Anomalies within Anomalies |
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23 | (4) |
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27 | (5) |
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The Death Penalty and Identity in Texas |
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32 | (5) |
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Research Design and Methods |
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37 | (2) |
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39 | (3) |
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42 | (3) |
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45 | (1) |
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3 "I hope I'm strong enough to follow the law": Emotion and Objectivity in Capital Jurors' Decisions |
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46 | (36) |
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Defining Emotion and Empathy |
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49 | (3) |
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Instructing Capital Jurors: A Contradiction |
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52 | (4) |
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Socializing Jurors into Fact-Finders: Capital Voir Dire |
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56 | (5) |
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Objectivity and Impartial Juries |
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61 | (4) |
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65 | (4) |
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Oath, Honesty, and Obligation |
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69 | (2) |
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Jurors' Postverdict Comments on Emotion and Objectivity |
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71 | (5) |
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76 | (2) |
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Putting Emotion Aside and Death Qualification |
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78 | (4) |
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4 Facing Death: Empathy, Emotion, and Embodied Actions in Jurors' Decisions |
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82 | (38) |
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Paralinguistic Ideologies |
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84 | (5) |
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Studying Paralinguistic Ideologies in Capital Trials: A Methodological Caveat |
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89 | (1) |
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Jurors and Demeanor Evidence |
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90 | (1) |
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Empathy, the Face, and Law |
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91 | (2) |
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93 | (5) |
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Defendants' Presence and Personhood |
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98 | (2) |
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Defendants' Offstage Behavior |
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100 | (14) |
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Seeing Faces, Feeling Bodies in Capital Trials |
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114 | (6) |
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5 Linguistic Distance and the Dehumanization of Capital Defendants |
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120 | (40) |
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123 | (2) |
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Empathy, Proximity, and Language |
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125 | (1) |
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Deixis and Reference to Defendants |
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126 | (2) |
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Person Reference and Personhood |
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128 | (4) |
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Analyzing Demonstrative Reference and Proximity |
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132 | (1) |
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133 | (2) |
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Legal Models of Linguistic Distance |
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135 | (5) |
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Jurors, Demonstrative Reference, and Giving Death |
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140 | (1) |
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Dehumanization and Death Sentences |
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141 | (2) |
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Demonstrative Reference and Jurors' Attribution of Criminal Responsibility |
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143 | (6) |
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This Guy's Life is at Stake |
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149 | (3) |
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Reference Forms as Indicators of Life or Death Decisions |
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152 | (3) |
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Reference and Defendants' Humanity |
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155 | (5) |
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6 Agents of the State: Capital Jurors' Accountability for Death Sentences |
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160 | (39) |
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Responsibility and the Death Penalty |
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162 | (3) |
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165 | (3) |
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Texas's Sentencing Scheme, Jury Instructions, and Juror Accountability |
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168 | (3) |
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Voir Dire as Socialization into Killing |
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171 | (9) |
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Questioning Jurors about Their Responsibility |
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180 | (4) |
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Jurors' Postverdict Formulations of Responsibility |
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184 | (4) |
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Passive Constructions and Mitigated Agency |
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188 | (1) |
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189 | (1) |
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190 | (4) |
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194 | (3) |
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Implications for Legal Practice |
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197 | (2) |
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7 Conclusion: Linguistic Dehumanization and Democracy |
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199 | (10) |
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Legal Language, Dehumanization, and Democracy |
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200 | (2) |
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Juries, Dehumanization, and Democracy |
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202 | (2) |
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Some Words for Legal Practitioners |
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204 | (2) |
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206 | (3) |
Bibliography |
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209 | (26) |
Index |
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235 | |