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'''Lorraine Patricia Gamman''' (July 1957) is professor of design at the [[Design Against Crime Research Centre]] at Central Saint Martins in the [[University of the Arts, London]].<ref>http://www.arts.ac.uk/research/ual-staff-researchers/a-z/professor-lorraine-gamman/</ref>
'''Lorraine Patricia Gamman''' (July 1957) is professor of design at the [[Design Against Crime Research Centre]] at Central Saint Martins in the [[University of the Arts, London]].<ref>http://www.arts.ac.uk/research/ual-staff-researchers/a-z/professor-lorraine-gamman/</ref>


Her taking of the [[oral history]] of professional shoplifter [[Shirley Pitts]] as part of her PhD kindled her interest in oral history as a form and lead to her book ''Gone shopping: The story of Shirley Pitts, Queen of thieves''.<ref>[http://www.goneshopping.org.uk/the_story_more_01.html The Story.] Gone Shopping. Retrieved 13 September 2017.</ref> In 2012, the production company [[Tiger Aspect]] bought an option to acquire the television and film rights to the book.
Her taking of the [[oral history]] of professional shoplifter [[Shirley Pitts]] as part of her PhD<ref>{{cite book|last1=Gamman|first1=Lorraine|title=Discourses on women and shoplifting: a critical analysis of why female crime mythologies past and present operate to legitimate the incompatibility between female gender roles and the idea of women as active agents of crime|date=1999}}</ref> kindled her interest in oral history as a form and lead to her book ''Gone shopping: The story of Shirley Pitts, Queen of thieves''.<ref>[http://www.goneshopping.org.uk/the_story_more_01.html The Story.] Gone Shopping. Retrieved 13 September 2017.</ref> In 2012, the production company [[Tiger Aspect]] bought an option to acquire the television and film rights to the book.


==Selected publications==
==Selected publications==

Revision as of 11:15, 7 December 2017

Lorraine Patricia Gamman (July 1957) is professor of design at the Design Against Crime Research Centre at Central Saint Martins in the University of the Arts, London.[1]

Her taking of the oral history of professional shoplifter Shirley Pitts as part of her PhD[2] kindled her interest in oral history as a form and lead to her book Gone shopping: The story of Shirley Pitts, Queen of thieves.[3] In 2012, the production company Tiger Aspect bought an option to acquire the television and film rights to the book.

Selected publications

  • The female gaze. The Women's Press, 1988. (With Margaret Marshment) ISBN 0704341093
  • Female fetishism: A new look. Lawrence & Wishart, 1994. (With Merja Makinen) ISBN 0853157553
  • Gone shopping: The story of Shirley Pitts, Queen of thieves. Signet/Penguin, 1996. ISBN 0451182588 (2nd edition 2012)
  • Dirty Washing – The Hidden Language of Soap Powder Boxes, Design Museum 2001 (With Sean O’Mara).
  • Built Environment: Sustainability via Security: A New Look, 35 (3), 2009. (Co-edited with Rachel Armitage). ISSN 02637960
  • Theft of customers’ personal property from cafes and bars. Problem-Oriented Guides for Police, Problem- Specific Guides Series, Guide no. 60. U.S. Department of Justice, Centre for Problem Oriented Policing, 2010. (With Kate Bowers, Shane Johnson, Loreen Mamerow and Anna Warne). ISBN 978-1-935676-15-7
  • CoDesign - International Journal of CoCreation in Design and the Arts, 7 (3-4). Special Issue on Socially Responsive Design, 2011. (Co-edited with Adam Thorpe) ISSN 1571-0882

Forthcoming publication

  • Tricky design: The ethics of things. 2017. (Joint editor with Tom Fisher) ISBN 978-1474277181

Gamman has written many journal articles (too numerous to list here) but some of the chapters in books she has written include:

  • Reviewing Queer Viewing – The Gaze Revisited (With Caroline Evans), 1995. In: A Queer Romance: Lesbians, Gay Men and Popular Culture (Eds. P. Burston and C. Richardson), Routledge. ISBN 9780415096188
  • Visual Seduction and Perverse Compliance: Reviewing Food Fantasies, Hidden Appetites and ‘Grotesque’ Bodies, 2000. In: ‘Fashion Cultures’ (Eds. S. Bruzzi and P. Gibson), Routledge. ISBN 9780415206860
  • Self-fashioning and the shoe: what’s at stake in Female Fetishism or Narcissism, 2001. In ‘Footnotes: On Shoes’ (Eds. Suzanne Ferris and Shari Benstock), Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813528717
  • Criminality and creativity: what’s at stake in designing against crime? (With Adam Thorpe) In: Design Anthropology: Object Culture in the 21st Century. Springer, New York/Vienna, pp. 52-67, 2010. ISBN 9783709102336
  • Reviewing the art of crime - what, if anything, do criminals and artists/designers have in common? (With Maziar Raein) In: Cropley, D. et al (Eds.) The Dark Side of Creativity. pp.155-177. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2010. ISBN 9780521139601
  • Reducing Handbag Theft, 2012. (With Paul Ekblom, Kate Bowers, Aiden Sidebottom, Chris Thomas, Adam Thorpe and Marcus Willcocks). In: Ekblom, P. (Ed.) Design Against Crime: Crime Proofing Everyday Objects. Crime Prevention Studies 27. Boulder, Col.: Lynne Rienner. ISBN 9781588268136
  • Female Slenderness and the Case of Perverse Compliant Deception - or Why Size Matters... In: Fashion Cultures Revisited: Theories, Explorations and Analysis. Routledge, pp. 296-304, 2013. ISBN 9780415680066
  • Could Design Help to Promote and Build Empathic Processes in Prison? Understanding the Role of Empathy and Design in Catalysing Social Change and Transformation. (With Adam Thorpe) In: Transformation Design: Perspectives on a New Design Attitude. Board of International Research in Design, 2015. Birkhäuser/ BIRD, pp. 83-100. ISBN 978-3-0356-0653-9
  • Design for Empathy – why participatory design has a contribution to make regarding facilitating restorative values and processes, 2016. (With Adam Thorpe) In: Gavrielides, T. (Ed.) Offenders No More: New Offender Rehabilitation Theory and Practice. NY: Nova Science Pub. ISBN 978-1-63483-681-4
  • What is “Socially Responsive Design and Innovation”?, 2015. (With Adam Thorpe) In: Fisher, F. and Sparke, P. (Eds.) Routledge Companion to Design Studies. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. ISBN 9781138780507
  • Is Nudge as good as We Think in Designing Against crime? Contrasting Paternalistic and Fraternalistic Approaches to Design for Behaviour Change, 2018 (With Adam Thorpe) pp 216-234. In: Kristina Niedderer, Stephen Clune,‎ Geke Ludden (Eds) Design for Behaviour Change: Theories and practices of designing for change (Design for Social Responsibility). ISBN 9781472471987

References

  1. ^ http://www.arts.ac.uk/research/ual-staff-researchers/a-z/professor-lorraine-gamman/
  2. ^ Gamman, Lorraine (1999). Discourses on women and shoplifting: a critical analysis of why female crime mythologies past and present operate to legitimate the incompatibility between female gender roles and the idea of women as active agents of crime.
  3. ^ The Story. Gone Shopping. Retrieved 13 September 2017.