With this background in mind, it is easier to understand why some serial killers could be presented as sympathetic figures by the media, including the cultured and urbane Hannibal Lecter, who escapes by the end of Silence, unlike the crude and unsophisticated Buffalo Bill. In the same vein, the eponymous star of the long-running series Dexter justifies his homicidal tendencies by only killing other serial killers, and in doing so makes it safe for the viewer to identify with him.
Even so, it is difficult to explain some of the more extreme examples of our fascination with serial murder, such as “murderabilia,” which refers to the online sale of artwork, letters, and a range of other items from incarcerated serial killers. If you go to the website Supernaught.com, for example, you can buy one of the many paintings of Disney characters produced by John Wayne Gacy while he awaited execution on Illinois’ Death Row, a brick from Jeffrey Dahmer’s apartment building in which he killed and cannibalized young men and even a lock of Charles Manson’s hair.
Although the sale of murderabilia is the most bizarre and apparently inexplicable example of our collective fascination with serial murder, the items available on murderabilia websites differ only in degree rather than kind from the constant stream of movies, books, magazines, television shows, calendars, action figures, websites, t-shirts and a plethora of ephemera that has given the figure of the serial murderer an unparalleled degree of visibility and fame in the contemporary American public sphere. In a culture defined by an understanding of celebrity that emphasizes visibility rather than meritocracy as the precondition for fame, serial killers like Bundy, Lecter and Dexter have become the biggest stars of all, instantly recognized by the vast majority of Americans. Our fascination with serial murder provides us with a funhouse mirror through which we can glimpse distorted but still accurate reflections of our fears, dreams and values.
David Schmid is an Associate Professor of English at The University at Buffalo.