Literature and Crime in Augustan England

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A01=Ian A. Bell
Act III
Alexander Pope
Augustan Age
Augustan England
Augustan Literature
Augustan Period
Augustan Writers
Author_Ian A. Bell
Bailey Session Papers
Beggar's Opera
Beggar’s Opera
Book III
Boswell's private journals
canonical texts
Category=DSBD
Comic Fiction
court report narratives
court reports
Covent Garden Journal
Criminal Biographies
criminal law
criminal representation
critical studies
Daniel Defoe
deviance
Early Eighteenth Century England
eighteenth-century England
eighteenth-century legal history
English literature 1702-1745
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Free Woman
George III
Henry Fielding
historical crime
Hogarth's Prints
Hogarth’s Prints
John Gay
Johnson's Poem
Johnson’s Poem
Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Wild
Lady Bellaston
legality
Llanbadarn Fawr
Man's Breast
Man’s Breast
Official Legal System
Old Bailey Session Papers
philosophical discourse law
philosophical writing
polemics
pornography
print culture crime studies
Samuel Richardson
satirical literature analysis
Session Papers
Sir Leon Radzinowicz
social deviance studies
the law
the press
William III
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367818913
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Eighteenth-century England saw an explosion of writings about deviance. In literature, in the law, and in the press, writers returned again and again to the question of crime and criminals.

While the extension of the legal system formalised the power of the state to categorise and punish ‘deviance’, writers repeatedly confronted the problematic nature of legal authority and the unstable idea of ‘the criminal’. Some of this commentary was supportive, some was subversive and resistant, uncovering the complexity of issues the law sought to ignore.

Originally published in 1991, Ian Bell’s masterly investigation of the diverse representations of crime and legality in the Augustan period ranges widely across the contemporary press, involving court reports, philosophical writings, periodicals, biographies, pornography and polemics. Re-assessing the canonical texts of eighteenth-century ‘Literature’, Bell situates the work of Defoe, Hogarth, Gay, Swift, Pope, Richardson and Fielding in its social and political context.

Ian A. Bell

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