Literary Executions
eBook - ePub

Literary Executions

Capital Punishment and American Culture, 1820–1925

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Literary Executions

Capital Punishment and American Culture, 1820–1925

About this book

Examines literary and legal sources to document thoughts and feelings about capital punishment in the United States over the long nineteenth century.

Drawing from legal and extralegal discourse but focusing on imaginative literature, Literary Executions examines representations of, responses to, and arguments for and against the death penalty in the United States over the long nineteenth century. John Cyril Barton creates a generative dialogue between artistic relics and legal history. He looks to novels, short stories, poems, and creative nonfiction as well as legislative reports, trial transcripts, legal documents, newspaper and journal articles, treatises, and popular books (like The Record of Crimes, A Defence of Capital Punishment, and The Gallows, the Prison, and the Poor House ), all of which were part of the debate over the death penalty.

Barton focuses on several canonical figures—James Fenimore Cooper, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Lydia Maria Child, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, and Theodore Dreiser—and offers new readings of their work in light of the death penalty controversy. Barton also gives close attention to a host of then-popular-but-now-forgotten writers—particularly John Neal, Slidell MacKenzie, William Gilmore Simms, Sylvester Judd, and George Lippard—whose work helped shape or was shaped by the influential anti-gallows movement.

Analyzing the tension between sovereignty and social responsibility in a democratic republic, Barton argues that the high stakes of capital punishment dramatize the confrontation between the citizen-subject and sovereign authority in its starkest terms. In bringing together the social and the aesthetic, Barton shows how legal forms informed literary forms and traces the emergence of the modern State in terms of the administration of lawful death.

By engaging the politics and poetics of capital punishment, Literary Executions contends that the movement to abolish the death penalty in the United States should be seen as an important part of the context that brought about the flowering of the American Renaissance during the antebellum period and that influenced literature later in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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Yes, you can access Literary Executions by John Cyril Barton in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Legal History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Introduction. The Cultural Rhetoric of Capital Punishment
  8. 1 Anti-gallows Activism in Antebellum American Law and Literature
  9. 2 Simms, Child, and the Aesthetics of Crime and Punishment
  10. 3 Literary Executions in Cooper, Lippard, and Judd
  11. 4 Hawthorne and the Evidentiary Value of Literature
  12. 5 Melville, MacKenzie, and Military Executions
  13. 6 Capital Punishment and the Criminal Justice System in Dreiser’s An American Tragedy
  14. Epilogue. ā€œThe Death Penalty in Literatureā€
  15. Notes
  16. Index