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Execution Culture in Nineteenth Century Britain
Details
This edited collection offers multi-disciplinary reflections and analysis on a variety of themes centred on nineteenth century executions in the UK, many specifically related to the fundamental change in capital punishment culture as the execution moved from the public arena to behind the prison wall.
Autorentext
Helen Rutherford is a Solicitor and Senior Lecturer in the Law School at Northumbria University. She is also in the final stages of PhD research at Newcastle University. She has published on legal education, legal history and the English Legal System. Her research interests focus on the life and work of the Victorian Coroner for Newcastle upon Tyne and nineteenth-century crime and punishment with a North East England focus.
Clare Sandford-Couch is a Visiting Lecturer in the Law School at Newcastle University. She practiced as a solicitor and was Senior Lecturer in law at Northumbria University for a number of years. She received her PhD in Art History from the University of Edinburgh in 2014. She has published on legal history, art history and the role of the arts and humanities in legal education. Her research interests largely address interactions of law and visual culture, and late medieval Italian art history. Her current research focus includes crime histories in nineteenth century Newcastle upon Tyne.
Patrick Low is an independent researcher and freelance TV historian (regular contributor to BBC One's Murder, Mystery and My Family). He received his PhD from the University of Sunderland in 2019; his thesis examined capital punishment in the North East of England between 1800-1878 and its attendant post-mortem punishments from 1752-1878. He created the Wellcome Trust and University of Leicester's website Harnessing the Power of the Criminal Corpse and presents ongoing research on his blog.
Inhalt
Introduction
Chapter 1, '[T]he broken stave at the top of the ladder of England's civilisation': Representing the ending of public execution in 1868.
James Gregory
PART 1: Going to See a Man Hanged:
Chapter 2, **'A practice which wounds only the living': Publicly Punishing the Criminal Body in Nineteenth-Century Scotland.
Rachel Bennett**
Chapter 3, **'Every Loathsome Reptile Form of Vice and Crime'. Formulations of the Nineteenth-Century London Execution Crowd: Fears, Fictions and Realities.
Matthew White**
Chapter 4, 'How Murderers Die': The Impact of the 1868 Abolition of Public Execution on Life-writing by Executioners.
Katherine Ebury
Chapter 5, 'Stand in the place of those executed': Interpreting Capital Punishment in UK Prison Museums.
Rhiannon Pickin
PART 2: 'One had better narrate the circumstances as they occurred'
Chapter 6, '[] were sensation our object, it would not be difficult to cull from the Newgate Calendar': Periodical Journalism and Distaste for Public Executions, c. 1830-1870.
Samuel Saunders
Chapter 7, George Vass: the making and un-making of a criminal monster.
Helen Rutherford and Clare Sandford-Couch
Chapter 8, The 'Hermetically sealed' Prison: Witnessing Executions in the North East of England 1868-1878.
Patrick Low
Chapter 9, **The only consolation is that the criminal is not a Welshman: The foreign-born men hanged in Wales, 1840-1900.
Stephanie Emma Brown**
Index
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09780367521462
- Editor Low Patrick, Rutherford Helen, Sandford-Couch Clare
- Sprache Englisch
- Genre History
- Anzahl Seiten 218
- Größe H234mm x B156mm
- Jahr 2022
- EAN 9780367521462
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 978-0-367-52146-2
- Veröffentlichung 30.05.2022
- Titel Execution Culture in Nineteenth Century Britain
- Autor Patrick Rutherford, Helen Sandford-Couch, Cla Low
- Untertitel From Public Spectacle to Hidden Ritual
- Gewicht 453g
- Herausgeber Routledge