• Research Paper on:
    Reasons for Human Stalking

    Number of Pages: 6

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    In six pages human stalking and its reasons are examined. Seven sources are cited in the bibliography.

    Name of Research Paper File: LM1_TLCstalk.rtf

    Buy This Research Paper »

     

    Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
    PG) - is often meant as a gesture of adoration in the mind of a psychologically unbalanced individual, as in the case of celebrity stalking; however, more times than not,  it is an angry and unthinking response to emotional turmoil from such circumstances as a romantic breakup or unrequited love. Like a lion  stalking the antelope, human stalkers focus in upon their prey - whether the person is the object of their affection or their wrath - and relentlessly tracks their every move.  Following them to work, home and all places in between, stalkers hone in on their targets with reckless abandon, while at the same time studying each and every nuance  of this individuals life so that he - or she, since stalkers represent both genders - knows where their target will be at every moment of every day. When one  thinks of the connotation of the word stalker, one of the first images that comes to mind is that of a serial killer. Typically unassuming, intelligent and almost always  the neighborhood nice guy, serial killers wear a convincing mask, never revealing what evil lurks within. Some of the most notorious mass-murderers in history -- Jeffrey Dahmer, John Wayne  Gacy, Charles Manson, Albert DeSalvo, David Berkowitz, the Silver Gunman -- have employed a mixed bag of tricks to entice and entrap myriad unsuspecting victims, which they brutally tortured and  raped to ultimately kill and often dismember (Toufexis 64). There are many answers to the question that asks why do these seemingly normal  people stalk innocent victims and then commit such unthinkable acts. To look at Dahmer, Bundy or a majority of serial killers, there is often no indication of the monster 

    Back to Research Paper Results