Loading Inventory...

Making Murder Public, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

From Oxford University Press

Current price: $102.95
Making Murder Public, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
Making Murder Public, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

From Oxford University Press

Making Murder Public, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

Current price: $102.95
Loading Inventory...

Size: 25.4 x 234 x 444

Visit retailer's website
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Homicide has a history. In early modern England, that history saw two especially notable developments: one, the emergence in the sixteenth century of a formal distinction between murder and manslaughter, made meaningful through a lighter punishment than death for the latter, and two, asignificant reduction in the rates of homicides individuals perpetrated on each other. Making Murder Public explores connections between these two changes. It demonstrates the value in distinguishing between murder and manslaughter, or at least in seeing how that distinction came to matter in a period which also witnessed dramatic drops in the occurrence of homicidal violence. Focusedon the \"politics of murder\", Making Murder Public examines how homicide became more effectively criminalized between 1480 and 1680, with chapters devoted to coroners' inquests, appeals and private compensation, duels and private vengeance, and print and public punishment. The English had begunmoving away from treating homicide as an offence subject to private settlements or vengeance long before other Europeans, at least from the twelfth century. What happened in the early modern period was, in some ways, a continuation of processes long underway, but intensified and refocused bydevelopments from 1480 to 1680.Making Murder Public argues that homicide became fully \"public\" in these years, with killings seen to violate a \"king's peace\" that people increasingly conflated with or subordinated to the \"public peace\" or \"public justice.\""K. J. Kesselring is Professor of History at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. She is the author of a series of articles and essays on homicide and criminal forfeiture, and books on Mercy and Authority in the Tudor State and The Northern Rebellion of 1569. She has also edited orco-edited collections on The Trial of Charles I, Married Women and the Law: Coverture in England and the Common Law World (with Tim Stretton), and Crossing Borders: Boundaries and Margins in Medieval and Early Modern Britain (with Sara M. Butler). | Making Murder Public, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
Powered by Adeptmind