Women and murder in early modern news pamphlets and broadside ballads, 1573-1697

Author(s)

    • Martin, Randall

Bibliographic Information

Women and murder in early modern news pamphlets and broadside ballads, 1573-1697

selected and introduced by Randall Martin

(The early modern Englishwoman : a facsimile library of essential works, ser. 3 . Essential works for the study of early modern women ; pt. 1, v. 7)

Ashgate, c2005

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. xx-xxi)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

As voyeuristic and prurient as today's tabloid newspapers, early modern crime pamphlets and broadside ballads about women murderers tell of furtive love affairs and domestic poisonings, of battered wives who kill their abusive husbands, and of troubled mothers who murder their children. On first acquaintance, many pamphlets leave an impression of shallow sensationalism yoked to idealised repentance, and for that reason modern critics and historians have often discounted their importance as culturally significant artifacts. This volume presents a selection of over forty texts and is intended to encourage a reconsideration of these views. In his Introductory Note to the volume, Randall Martin discusses the narrative content and social commentary of these ballads, pamphlets and trial reports, and the contribution that they make to the discursive construction of the early modern female murderer through their representational strategies and evolving legal and gender contexts.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Preface by the general editors
  • Introductory note
  • 46 writings.

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