Public relations as ‘tour of duty’: ‘Dis’embodying PR work in Criminal Minds

Bourne, Clea D.. 2024. Public relations as ‘tour of duty’: ‘Dis’embodying PR work in Criminal Minds. In: Lee Edwards; Clea Bourne; Jason Vincent Cabañes and Gisela Castro, eds. The Sage Handbook of Promotional Culture and Society. London: Sage, pp. 325-339. ISBN 9781529602623 [Book Section]

No full text available
[img] Text
Bourne- CHAPTER- PR as Tour of Duty-CriminalMinds-PopCulture-FINAL-FINAL-Sept2024.pdf - Accepted Version
Permissions: Administrator Access Only until 1 December 2026.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (352kB)

Abstract or Description

In this chapter, the television crime drama, Criminal Minds becomes a locus for analysing the fluid nature of occupational identity in the promotional professions. The fictional character, Jennifer Jareau or ‘JJ’ engages with specific artifacts of public relations (PR) work for the first six seasons of the show, before moving out of her communications role to become an FBI profiler, at which point her public relations work disappears without a trace. As a career trajectory, JJ’s first embodying then disembodying of a PR role is significant. Not only does JJ’s tour of duty in PR echo many real-life career trajectories, it also complicates idealised notions of ‘who’ does promotional work. The chapter analyses scenes from ‘early’ Criminal Minds to highlight JJ’s embodying of three overlapping occupational identities and cultural typologies – the FBI agent, the PR practitioner and the female detective. The chapter concludes by offering a framework for analysing different aspects of embodiment in professional work.

Item Type:

Book Section

Keywords:

Crime drama, Criminal Minds, embodiment, FBI, gender, fiction, public relations, profiler

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Media, Communications and Cultural Studies

Dates:

DateEvent
1 December 2024Published

Item ID:

37543

Date Deposited:

17 Sep 2024 09:34

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2024 22:55

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/37543

View statistics for this item...

Edit Record Edit Record (login required)