Abstract
This article explores the relationships between crime, collective responses
to it, and the social production of so-called great criminals. It argues that crime,
especially sexual and violent crime, produces significant imbalances in individuals
habitually subject to instrumental actions, identitarian thinking and positive law.
These imbalances are emotional as well as cognitive and, under certain conditions of
communication, can generate states of multitude, that is, collective states linked to an
intense affectivity and to the prevalence of mythic or symbolic thinking. These states
reach their limits and become condensed in the mytho-historical figure of the great
criminal. In this sense, great criminals are a function of such multitudinous states:
points of imputation that concentrate and catalyze the affective imagination unleashed
by collective effervescence.