This class will be on Tuesday 14 March.
Secondary sources
M Gaskill, Crime and mentalities in early modern England, chaps. 6-7; or M Gaskill, ‘Reporting murder: fiction in the archives in early modern England’, Social History, 23 (1998).
P Lake, ‘ “Deeds against nature”: cheap print, protestantism and murder in early seventeenth-century England’, in Kevin Sharpe and Peter Lake (eds), Culture and politics in early Stuart England (1994).
Frances Dolan, Dangerous familiars: representations of domestic crime in England 1550-1750 (1994).
(Don’t forget to refer back to the articles on violence that we read for week 2 as well.)
Primary source
Select a murder pamphlet from Early English Books Online (EEBO). (You’ll need to sign in with your Athens password if using this off campus.) You may want to download a copy to keep/print off (see notes below). Be ready to discuss it in class.
Ask yourself: what’s the moral of the story? Think about the kind of language that’s used, and what sort of audience it might have been aimed at.
Also, if you remember the homicide case in court records that we looked at before (the Francis Wood case, which is archived on Blackboard), how does it compare with that?
Notes
Tips for searching EEBO: if you simply type ‘murder’ in the keyword search, you’ll be presented with a very large number of hits, consisting of a wide variety of texts. A title or subject search for ‘murder’ should give something more manageable. (You could further narrow your search down by restricting dates searched.) Even then, you’ll get a variety of results. Murder pamphlets are quite easy to spot once you know what you’re looking for. They’re generally not very long: you should be able to find good examples about 8 pages in length. (But NB that if it’s just a single page it may be a ballad, which is a related but distinct genre.) The titles frequently contain lurid phrases like “bloody news”, “barbarous murder”, and/or “a true account of the trial of…”, “The last confession of…”, etc.
The process to download a copy of the whole text (as a PDF file) to read or print off or save on your own computer or in your M drive is a bit longwinded:
1. On the screen that shows the first page of your text, check the box that says “Add this record to your Marked List”.
2. Click on “Marked List” at the top of the page.
3. Click on “Download Document Image sets in PDF format”.
4. Check “Download entire document” and then the blue Download button
5. It’ll take it a few seconds to generate a PDF. Click on “confirm”.
6. Then either “open” or “save” in the dialogue box that should pop up. (If you choose “open”, you’ll need to subsequently save a copy to your computer if you want to keep it.)
If you have any problems with this, get in touch with me.
I’ll probably post the readings for the following class (on Friday 17 March) next week so that you have some extra time available for preparation, since there’ll only be three days between the two classes.