Language:
English
繁體中文
Help
Login
Back
Switch To:
Labeled
|
MARC Mode
|
ISBD
William Corder and the red barn murd...
~
McCorristine, Shane.
William Corder and the red barn murder = journeys of the criminal body /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
William Corder and the red barn murder/ Shane McCorristine.
Reminder of title:
journeys of the criminal body /
Author:
McCorristine, Shane.
Published:
Basingstoke :Palgrave Pivot, : 2014.,
Description:
128 p. :8 b&w, ill. :
Notes:
Electronic book text.
Subject:
Crime & criminology - United Kingdom, Great Britain. -
Online resource:
Online journal 'available contents' page
ISBN:
1137439394 (electronic bk.) :
William Corder and the red barn murder = journeys of the criminal body /
McCorristine, Shane.
William Corder and the red barn murder
journeys of the criminal body /[electronic resource] :Shane McCorristine. - 1st ed. - Basingstoke :Palgrave Pivot,2014. - 128 p. :8 b&w, ill.
Electronic book text.
1. The Murder in the Red Barn 2. The Criminal Body Dismembered 3. The Criminal Body Remembered Appendix 1: Crime, Trial, and Dismemberment Appendix 2: Representations and Afterlives.
Document
This study reassesses the criminal body from sentencing to execution and afterlife, using the nineteenth-century Red Barn murder as a case study. Positioned within the burgeoning field of medical humanities, it places culture and power at the centre of debates surrounding criminal justice and public punishment.On 18 May 1827 the Suffolk farmer William Corder killed and buried his lover Maria Martin in the Red Barn at Polstead. The discovery of this murder the following year set off a feeding-frenzy in which Corder became one of the most notorious villains in British history, a celebrity criminal for preachers, ballad singers, anatomists, and generations of theatre managers. The Red Barn was almost destroyed for souvenirs and relics while Corder's corpse was dissected and displayed, galvanized and scalped. This original study maps out the remarkable journey of Corder's body from dismemberment to remembrance. Rather than providing a traditional historical model, the book challenges concepts of death and execution. What does it mean for a criminal to be declared dead? How far were medical authorities and public audiences actors in the theatrical production of criminal justice? What about popular legends and dreams about criminals, about the places they haunt and the sites of their burial or display? In short, what happens to the power of the criminal once he/she has been declared 'dead' and punished? Positioned within the burgeoning field of medical humanities, McCorristine engages with current scholarship that is placing culture and power at the centre of debates surrounding criminal justice and public punishment. Death, it is clear, is not a terminus but a journey.
PDF.
Shane McCorristine is a Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Leicester and a College Lecturer in Geography at the University of Cambridge, UK.
ISBN: 1137439394 (electronic bk.) :£30.00Subjects--Topical Terms:
1011139
Crime & criminology
--United Kingdom, Great Britain.
LC Class. No.: HV6535.G6 / P654 2014
Dewey Class. No.: 364.1523
William Corder and the red barn murder = journeys of the criminal body /
LDR
:03319nam a22003732a 4500
001
799424
003
UK-WkNB
005
20140822000000.0
007
cu||||||||||||
008
150519e201408uuxxka |s|||||||0|0 eng|d
020
$a
1137439394 (electronic bk.) :
$c
£30.00
020
$a
9781137439383
020
$a
9781137439390 (electronic bk.) :
$c
£30.00
035
$a
9781137439390
040
$a
UK-WkNB
$b
eng
$c
UK-WkNB
050
4
$a
HV6535.G6
$b
P654 2014
072
$a
CRI
$2
ukslc
072
7
$a
HBTB
$x
1DBK
$2
bicssc
072
7
$a
JHBZ
$x
1DBK
$2
bicssc
072
7
$a
JKV
$x
1DBK
$2
bicssc
082
0 4
$a
364.1523
$2
23
100
1
$a
McCorristine, Shane.
$3
1011138
245
1 0
$a
William Corder and the red barn murder
$h
[electronic resource] :
$b
journeys of the criminal body /
$c
Shane McCorristine.
250
$a
1st ed.
260
$a
Basingstoke :
$b
Palgrave Pivot,
$c
2014.
300
$a
128 p. :
$b
8 b&w, ill.
365
$a
02
$b
30.00
$c
GBP
$d
00
$h
S 25.00 20.0 30.00 5.00
$j
GB
$k
xxk
$m
Palgrave Macmillan
$2
onix-pt
366
$b
20140818
$c
IP 20140817
$j
GB
$k
xxk
$m
Palgrave Macmillan
$2
UK-WkNB
500
$a
Electronic book text.
500
$a
Epublication based on: 9781137439383.
505
0
$a
1. The Murder in the Red Barn 2. The Criminal Body Dismembered 3. The Criminal Body Remembered Appendix 1: Crime, Trial, and Dismemberment Appendix 2: Representations and Afterlives.
516
$a
Document
520
$a
This study reassesses the criminal body from sentencing to execution and afterlife, using the nineteenth-century Red Barn murder as a case study. Positioned within the burgeoning field of medical humanities, it places culture and power at the centre of debates surrounding criminal justice and public punishment.
$b
On 18 May 1827 the Suffolk farmer William Corder killed and buried his lover Maria Martin in the Red Barn at Polstead. The discovery of this murder the following year set off a feeding-frenzy in which Corder became one of the most notorious villains in British history, a celebrity criminal for preachers, ballad singers, anatomists, and generations of theatre managers. The Red Barn was almost destroyed for souvenirs and relics while Corder's corpse was dissected and displayed, galvanized and scalped. This original study maps out the remarkable journey of Corder's body from dismemberment to remembrance. Rather than providing a traditional historical model, the book challenges concepts of death and execution. What does it mean for a criminal to be declared dead? How far were medical authorities and public audiences actors in the theatrical production of criminal justice? What about popular legends and dreams about criminals, about the places they haunt and the sites of their burial or display? In short, what happens to the power of the criminal once he/she has been declared 'dead' and punished? Positioned within the burgeoning field of medical humanities, McCorristine engages with current scholarship that is placing culture and power at the centre of debates surrounding criminal justice and public punishment. Death, it is clear, is not a terminus but a journey.
538
$a
PDF.
545
0
$a
Shane McCorristine is a Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Leicester and a College Lecturer in Geography at the University of Cambridge, UK.
650
7
$a
Crime & criminology
$z
United Kingdom, Great Britain.
$2
bicssc
$3
1011139
650
7
$a
Crime.
$3
802050
650
7
$a
Social & cultural history
$z
United Kingdom, Great Britain.
$2
bicssc
$3
1010316
650
7
$a
Sociology: death & dying
$z
United Kingdom, Great Britain.
$2
bicssc
$3
1011140
856
4
$u
http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137439390
$x
05
$z
Online journal 'available contents' page
based on 0 review(s)
Multimedia
Reviews
Add a review
and share your thoughts with other readers
Export
pickup library
Processing
...
Change password
Login