True Crime & Serial Killers: Black Dahlia Murders

SpIn-Black Dahlia Murders
The plan would be to explore the socio-cultural, artistic, and psychological landscape surrounding the 1947 murder of Elizabeth Short—known in popular culture as the Black Dahlia—through a trauma-informed, neurodivergent lens. Rather than viewing Elizabeth Short and Dr. George Hodel as caricatures of victim and villain, we will unpack their lives as neurodivergent individuals shaped by the forces of mid-century America: patriarchy, psychiatry, misdiagnosis, and the influence of surrealist art.
The session concludes with a reflection on Steve Hodel’s decades-long fixation on proving his father’s guilt—a pursuit often dismissed as obsessive or conspiratorial, but reframed here as a powerful example of neurodivergent hyperfocus, legacy trauma, and meaning-making.

Objectives:
• Identify the neurodivergent traits and potential masking/self-medication behaviors of both Elizabeth Short and George Hodel.
• Analyze the role of surrealism—specifically through Man Ray, William Copley, and Marcel Duchamp—as both an aesthetic influence and a cultural force shaping Hodel’s psychology.
• Examine the social conditions and power dynamics affecting Short’s life, including misogyny, neurodivergence, and the myth of the ‘tragic beauty’.
• Explore Steve Hodel’s investigative journey as a lens into neurodivergent hyperfixation, legacy trauma, and the search for justice.
• Engage in ethical discussion around true crime narratives and the sensationalism of neurodivergent lives.