Advanced Content Search
»My Wallet  »View Cart
Resources
Blank
» Home
Blank
» What's New
Blank
» eBook of the Month
Blank
» Browse by Subject
Blank
» Audio
Blank
» Download Centre
Blank
» eBooks for Libraries
Blank
» eBook Formats
Blank
» Help
Blank
» T&F Home
Blank
» Contact Us
Blank
» Help Desk
Blank
» SPON Download Centre
Blank
» Change Country
Blank

Your Country:-
United States

Blank
DPSL

Humanities || History

Violence and Crime in Nineteenth Century England -The Shadow of our Refinement

Author: J. Carter Wood

Master eBook ISBN10 : 0-203-39118-7

Master eBook ISBN13 : 978-0-203-39118-1

No of pages : 224

eBook Price : $206

Originally Published : 22 Apr 2004

Why does violence seem to haunt modern civilization? Can violence "speak", and if so, what can it tell us? Where do our attitudes toward violence come from?
This book examines these questions by considering a critical period in the evolution of attitudes toward violence. Using the English experience, it explores the meanings of violence through an accessible mixture of detailed empirical research and a broad survey of cutting-edge historical theory. It critically investigates the concept of the "civilizing process" and asks readers to rethink their own views of violence.
Nineteenth-century social upheaval changed attitudes toward class, gender, suffering, public space and state power, leading to new understandings of violence. Adherents of emerging "civilized" views confronted a "customary" mentality with different views of violent behaviour. That encounter saw the "invention" of violence as a social problem that was seen to threaten a nascent culture of refinement. The author critically examines this process, and the customary mentality of violence is given particularly close attention. The complex and dynamic interactions between civilization and custom are revealed through topics such as streetfighting, policing, sports, community discipline and domestic violence. Although customary notions eventually faded, this book shows how the nineteenth century established enduring patterns in views of violence.
Violence and Crime in Nineteenth-Century England will be essential reading for advanced students and researchers of modern British history, social and cultural history and criminology.



Order an electronic Inspection Copy


Buy Printed Book

All Mobipocket & Microsoft eBooks are copy and print disabled. Adobe eBooks can be printed but not copied.

Click on an eBook format to add to cart.

Read about the eBook Formats.Buy Printed Book.

Table of contents : 1. 'Speakable' Violence: Mentality and Violence, Narrative and Counternarrative
2. A Useful Savagery: Violence, Civilization and Middle-Class Identity
3. 'Vigorous Passions and Decided Actions': Custom and the Cultural Contexts of Violence
4. 'The Brave Old English Custom' : Dispute, Recreation and Ritual Violence among Working-Class Men
5. 'The Wrongdoing of the Poor Man Is as Open as Day' : Built Space, Imagined Space, Knowledge and Violence
6. 'Heave Half a Brick at a Stranger' : Strategies of Violence


Top