Exceptional Crime in Early Modern Spain: Taxonomic and Intellectual Perspectives

Author:   Elena del Rio Parra
Publisher:   Brill
Volume:   68
ISBN:  

9789004390171


Pages:   218
Publication Date:   27 June 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Exceptional Crime in Early Modern Spain: Taxonomic and Intellectual Perspectives


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Overview

Exceptional Crime in Early Modern Spain accounts for the representation of violent and complex murders, analysing the role of the criminal, its portrayal through rhetorical devices, and its cultural and aesthetic impact. Proteic traits allow for an understanding of how crime is constructed within the parameters of exception, borrowing from pre-existent forms while devising new patterns and categories such as criminography, the star killer , the staging of crimes as suicides, serial murders, and the faking of madness. These accounts aim at bewildering and shocking demanding readers through a carefully displayed cult to excessive behaviour. The arranged economy of death displayed in murder accounts will set them apart from other exceptional instances, as proven by their long-standing presence in subsequent centuries.

Full Product Details

Author:   Elena del Rio Parra
Publisher:   Brill
Imprint:   Brill
Volume:   68
Weight:   0.503kg
ISBN:  

9789004390171


ISBN 10:   9004390170
Pages:   218
Publication Date:   27 June 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements List of Illustrations A Murder of Crows 1 The Taxonomic Axis of Fatality: From Series of Monsters to Serial Murderers 1 From Series to Individuals 2 Series and Fatality 3 From Series of Monsters to Serial Murderers 2 Sketching the Face of Evil: Pioneering Serial Killers 1 The Antihero Factory 2 In Search of Singularity 3 Sketching the Face of Evil 4 Printing in Parts 3 On the Edge: Living between Suicide and Madness 1 Official and False Madmen 2 Books, Titles, Laws 3 Hanging from a Beam by Choice 4 Living on the Edge 4 Expressing Criminal Behavior 1 Detection before Detectives 2 Patterns in Crime 3 Killers as Pretenders 4 Killing and Obsession 5 Dying in Parts: Criminography and the Cult of Excess 1 The Syntax of Evil: From Fait-Divers to the Crime Catalogue 2 Casus and Criminography 3 Dying in Parts 4 The Cult of Excess Cleaning the Crime Scene Bibliography Index of Names and Subjects

Reviews

Exceptional Crime in Early Modern Spain delights us with its wealth of sources from literature on crime in early modern Spain. [...] With Exceptional Crime Prof. del Rio Parra brings together the history of crime and the history of taxonomy, proving that the classificatory obsession was not the exclusive domain of early modern natural philosophers or the Enlightenment. [...] This book may also inspire further research into areas such as the gendered component of crime narrative as well as its authorship by comparing the Iberian case to its counterparts elsewhere in the world. Marta V. Vicente, University of Kansas, in Bulletin for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Vol. 45 : Issue 1, Review 5, 147-9 The study of violence in the early modern Hispanic world tends to focus on the exclusion of minority religious groups and the exploitation of native populations across imperial domains. Little attention, however, seems to have been given to what Elena del Rio Parra calls 'private crimes': the quotidian accounts of stabbings and dismemberments that occurred among friends, lovers, relatives, and strangers who crossed paths and swords. In her Exceptional Crime in Early Modern Spain, Del Rio explores early modern narratives of unique murders and blood crimes, and shows how they reveal an eclectic period where superstitious, religious, and scientific ideas were intertwined. [...] Drawing from a wide array of noncanonical sources involving correspondence, judicial documents, legal allegations, chapbooks, ballads, chroniclers, and medical treatises, her work persuasively argues that we can trace embryonic forms of criminology and criminal anthropology to a period some two hundred years prior to their formal establishment as sciences. Beatriz E. Salamanca, in Sixteenth Century Journal 52.1 (2021).


Author Information

Elena del Rio Parra, Ph.D. (2001), Georgia State University, is Professor of Hispanic Studies. Her body of work deals with monstrosity, casuistry, extremophilia, accident, and the role of singularity in early modern Spain from an intellectual history perspective.

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