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Criminality and the Common Law Imagination in the 18th and 19th Centuries
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(Buch) |
Dieser Artikel gilt, aufgrund seiner Grösse, beim Versand als 3 Artikel!
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A new framework for examining the relationship between individual and cultural trauma, literary texts and the cumulative 'truth' produced by the common law
Through interdisciplinary readings of a range of literary and legal texts across a 200-year period, this book uncovers the connections between the individual and collective memories of law and crime that affected the development of the law itself. It draws on 3 case studies - adultery, child criminality and rape testimony - that demonstrate the impact of cultural narrative on legal development in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Erin Sheley shows how the symbolic relationship between adultery and threatened English sovereignty created a quasi-criminal legal discourse surrounding the private wrong of adultery; how the literary 'construction' of childhood by 19th-century fairy-tale writers affected the development of the juvenile justice system; and how evolving rules about rape victim 'character evidence' functioned as epistemological components of volatile national identity.
Transformative readings of widely read works include:
¿ Charles Brockden Brown's 'Wieland and Ormond'
¿ Thomas Hardy's 'Tess of the d'Urbervilles'
¿ Charles Kingsley's 'The Water-Babies'
¿ George MacDonald's 'The Lost Princess'
¿ Alfred, Lord Tennyson's 'Idylls of the King'
¿ Charlotte Brontë's 'Jane Eyre'
¿ Henry Fielding's 'The Modern Husband'
¿ Sir Walter Scott's 'Heart of Midlothian'
¿ Samuel Richardson's 'Clarissa'
Erin Sheley is Associate Professor at the University of Oklahoma College of Law |
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