Illusive shadows : justice, media, and socially significant American trials
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Illusive shadows : justice, media, and socially significant American trials
Praeger, 2003
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [207]-214) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
As Chiasson and his contributors illustrate, trials are media events that can have long-reaching significance. They can, and have, changed the way people think, how institutions function, and have shaped public opinions. While this collection on ten trials is about withcraft, slavery, religion, and radicalism, it is, in many ways, the story of America.
Trials are the stuff of news. Those rare moments when justice, or a reasonable facsimile, is meted out. And what offers up more high drama, or melodrama, than a highly publicized trial? Most news events enjoy short life spans. They happen; they are reported; they are quickly forgotten. As Chiasson and his contributors make clear, a trial often is a lingering, living thing that builds in tension. It is, every once in a long while, a modern Shakespearean drama with a twist: The audience becomes members of the cast because, every once in a long while, society finds itself the defendant.
Trials can have lasting importance beyond how the public perceives them. A trial can have long-reaching significance if it changes the way people think, or how institutions function, or shapes public opinion. Ten such American trials covering a span of 307 years are covered here. In each, the sociological underpinnings of events often has greater significance than either the crime or the trial. The ten trials included are the Salem witch trials, the Amistad trial, the Sioux Indian Uprising trials, the Ed Johnson/Sheriff Shipp trial, the Big Bill Haywood trial, the Ossian Sweet trial, the Clay Shaw trial, the Manuel Noriega trial, and the Matthew Shepard trial. While the book is about ten crimes, the subsequent trials, and the media coverage of each, it is also a book about witchcraft, about religion, slavery, and radicalism. It paints portraits of a racist America, a capitalistic America, an anarchist America. It relates compelling tales of compassion, greed, stupidity, and hate beginning in 17th-century colonial times and ending in present-day America. In many ways, it is the story of America.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
The Opening Statement
The Case of the Salem Witch Trials by Lloyd Chiasson Jr.
The Case of the Amistad Mutiny by Bernell E. Tripp
The Case of the Sioux Uprisings by Joseph P. McKerns
The Case of Ed Johnson by Kittrell Rushing
The Case of "Big Bill" Haywood by David Spencer
The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti by Arthur Kaul
The Case of Ossian Sweet by Elijah F. Akhahenda
The Case of Clay Shaw by Robert Dardenne
The Case of Manuel Noriega by Nancy McKenzie Dupont
The Case of Matthew Shepard by Alfred Delahaye
The Summation
Bibliography
About the Editor and the Contributors
Index
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