Role Of Serial Killers In The Naturals By Jennifer Lynn Barns

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Tracy Vu Lim 10 Accelerated English Language Arts 15 May 2024 Are serial killers born or created? There are 67-180 discovered and identified victims of serial killer killings each year. That leaves approximately 600,000 people who are declared missing every year. Only 4,400 unidentified bodies are discovered each year. This means only 0.007333% of people who go missing are found and able to be identified. The book The Naturals by Jennifer Lynn Barns follows a girl called Cassie who focuses on following a murder case that makes her look into the murder of her mother. As stated by Psychology Today Staff in their article Serial Killers, “Many serial killers suffered terrible childhood abuse, suggesting an environmental component,” (Psychology …show more content…

Each component plays a role in one's life, from what triggers their psychotic break, to why they have a strong desire to get revenge on the world for what they experienced. In The Naturals, Jennifer Lynn Barns illustrates the unresolved trauma a 17-year-old Cassie Hobbes goes through as she tries to live in a new environment with new people solving murders that remind her of her mother's murder. Barnes shows, “Glancing up at Michael and Sloane, I laid my mother’s picture down between the two columns. Sloane studied it for a while. “She looks like the other victim,” she said, nodding to the column of redheads. “No,” I said, he said. “They look like her.” These women have all been killed in the past 9 months. My mother had been missing for 5 years,” (173). Cassie has this ability called BPE which also stands for Behavior Personality Environment which means she can figure out killer's motives just by the way they behave and their personality. Additionally, this means that she knows that the killer is targeting people who look like her mother and is killing them and molding them to look like Cassie’s …show more content…

This helps researchers gain clarity on how natural-born psychopaths become and mold into serial killers. Psychopaths who commit serial murder do not value human life and are extremely callous in their interactions with their victims. These examples show how although psychopaths are born, not all become serial killers unless they are put in bad environments and have traumatic experiences early in their life which stunt their social interaction growth. Only 4,400 unidentified bodies out of 600,000 are discovered each year. This means only 0.007333% of people who go missing are found and able to be identified. The big question of whether serial killers are the result of nature or nurture has been a big interest topic for psychologists. Many serial killers suffered terrible childhood abuse, which suggests that the environment affected them, but many serial killers have an anti-social personality disorder, which means DNA could influence the later development of their extreme desire for homicidal

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