How crime dramas expose our anxieties about those on the frontline
French crime drama Spiral. BBC,
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Being a parent and a police officer is a dangerous mix, or so crime dramas continuously tell us. In particular danger, it seems, are the children of these fictional police officers, who are either neglected by their parents or are in harm鈥檚 way because they risk becoming victims of the criminals their parents are chasing. They may be abducted, even murdered, as criminals strike back at law enforcement.
Over several decades, the central police characters in television drama have become and often have stressful family lives. This more realistic turn 鈥 one of many examples of 鈥 expresses our ongoing anxieties about whether the and, if they can, at what cost to themselves and their families. Must they be damagingly obsessed with their work and fail their families? And might the violence we need them to get close to, so they can contain it, ultimately afflict their children?
The recurrence of this story line exposes our feelings about the police and also points to the broader emotional context of present anxieties about frontline health and care workers.
Crime fiction and audience feeling
Children of police officers becoming victims may or may not be frequent occurrences in reality, but they are in box-set drama. Whether it is maverick policewomen (The , , ) who struggle as mothers or neglectful fathers (, , ), their children seem to get into harm鈥檚 way.
The popularity of crime fiction rests, , on our emotional involvement with its stories. These stories are about guilt and justice. They tap into our pleasure in seeing wrongdoers apprehended and our safety protected.
The frequency of this subplot may well exaggerate the risks, but it expresses and draws attention to important emotional dimensions in our attitudes towards policing.
Both individually, and collectively as a public, we are vulnerable to intense anxieties about threats to our safety. In political debates about policing, this anxiety usually focuses on questions about resources and competence: are there enough police, are they properly trained and equipped, are they well-managed, and so on. These are, of course, issues which we may well be anxious about, because they are vital to our safety.
But there are other channels along which anxiety and other feelings about safety may flow. These may not appear much in policy discourse but can surface elsewhere, including in entertainment. With the frequency of this sub-plot, one of the messages of today鈥檚 crime fiction is that police work not only puts police personnel at risk, but their families as well 鈥 especially the most vulnerable of their kin, their children.
Another national debt
We are shown how the lives of individual police officers are at risk of being damaged, if not destroyed, by the violence at large in society and by the efforts needed to control it. This evokes not only our anxiety (who will protect the protectors?) but also our gratitude, and guilt, around the costs which the police and their families may face.
The current surges of gratitude towards health and care workers, and the concern around and the safety of their families, are a real world expression of very similar feelings. One potential post-pandemic societal gain could be a more permanent recognition of that kind of 鈥渘ational debt鈥.
Crime fiction returns us to the fundamental gratitude owed to all those employed in risk-laden public service, but it can also remind us that our gratitude is always shadowed by anxiety, and by some measure of guilt at the sacrifices of others.
Those are less comfortable feelings to have than simple gratitude, and there may be a temptation to turn away from them once the fear of COVID-19 has subsided. Awareness and acceptance of these feelings, however, may help to keep that debt at the centre of national priorities.
, Professor of Political Psychology,
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