Just to endorse one of Ben’s earlier observations, I would point out that Bundy’s final victim was a twelve-year-old girl who was killed and disposed of, then revisited and subjected to fresh indignities. Bundy not only decapitated her, but used the severed head to facilitate fellatio.
Unlike clockwork toys, the sadosexual serialist’s motivations and behaviours evolve over time. Techniques are adapted and refined, sometimes for practical purposes, but often simply to elevate the excitement of the killing experience. Some posters have questioned the logic of the notion that the Whitechapel Murderer might have stalked Mary Kelly, entered her room uninvited, then commenced the attack as she slept. I would suggest that those posters familiarise themselves with the case of Jose Marcelino, a Mexican serialist for whom killing simply wasn’t enough. He required the additional frisson of physical and psychological torture, and delighted in instilling terror in his victims as he described in graphic detail what was about to unfold. For other serialists, it is the act of stalking that really excites them. Some have even intimated that, when compared to the thrill of shadowing of a victim, killing came as something of an anticlimax.
Jack the Ripper was neither a clockwork toy nor a two-dimensional cardboard cut-out. His killing episodes were enactments of a deep-seated fantasy that was not only years in the making, but subject to refinement as the killing episodes progressed. It is only when this element of his psychopathology is understood, I would suggest, that one can begin to make informed judgements as to his motivations and behaviour relating to the death of Mary Kelly.
Best wishes.
Garry Wroe.
Unlike clockwork toys, the sadosexual serialist’s motivations and behaviours evolve over time. Techniques are adapted and refined, sometimes for practical purposes, but often simply to elevate the excitement of the killing experience. Some posters have questioned the logic of the notion that the Whitechapel Murderer might have stalked Mary Kelly, entered her room uninvited, then commenced the attack as she slept. I would suggest that those posters familiarise themselves with the case of Jose Marcelino, a Mexican serialist for whom killing simply wasn’t enough. He required the additional frisson of physical and psychological torture, and delighted in instilling terror in his victims as he described in graphic detail what was about to unfold. For other serialists, it is the act of stalking that really excites them. Some have even intimated that, when compared to the thrill of shadowing of a victim, killing came as something of an anticlimax.
Jack the Ripper was neither a clockwork toy nor a two-dimensional cardboard cut-out. His killing episodes were enactments of a deep-seated fantasy that was not only years in the making, but subject to refinement as the killing episodes progressed. It is only when this element of his psychopathology is understood, I would suggest, that one can begin to make informed judgements as to his motivations and behaviour relating to the death of Mary Kelly.
Best wishes.
Garry Wroe.
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