
Murderesses in German Writing, 1720–1860: Heroines of Horror
by Susanne Kord-
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Summary
Table of Contents
List of illustrations | p. vii |
Acknowledgments | p. viii |
Criminal women: on bodies, paradoxes, performances and tales | p. 1 |
A game in the dark: the principle of paradox | p. 1 |
The gender of crime: testimonies | p. 5 |
In the hall of mirrors: theories of investigation | p. 12 |
Searching the scene of the crime: modus operandi | p. 17 |
The evil eye: witches | p. 20 |
When looks could kill: the case of Anna Göet;ldi (Glarus, 1782) | p. 21 |
The blue-eyed monster: case studies of Anna Louisa Karsch (1775-1858) | p. 33 |
The plague: vampires | p. 43 |
Outbreak: Serbian vampires come to life in Germany (Leipzig and Vienna, 1732-1755) | p. 43 |
What is at stake, or why we cannot let it (them) rest | p. 51 |
Bloodbaths: the case of Elizabeth Báthory (born 1560, sentenced 1611, died 1614, returned from the grave from 1729 on) | p. 54 |
Containment: female vampires in literature from Goethe to the Grimms (1797-1823) | p. 71 |
Pride: husband-killers | p. 82 |
Murderous marriages and marriage as murder | p. 82 |
The case of Maria Katharina Wäet;chtler (Hamburg, 1786-1788) and the debate on torture | p. 86 |
The case of Christiane Ruthardt (Stuttgart, 1844-1845) and the death-penalty debate | p. 105 |
The ethical mandate and the aesthetics of horror | p. 115 |
Shame: child-killers | p. 121 |
Women as children, women as child-killers: poetic images (1770-1790) | p. 121 |
'Public whores' and 'honourable women': philosophical and legal issues (1760-1800) | p. 133 |
Criminals of lost honour? The cases of Dorothea Altwein and Johanna Catharina Höet;hn (Weimar, 1781 and 1783) | p. 141 |
The female self: poisoners | p. 154 |
The self-evident and evidence: criminologists and psychologists on poison and gender | p. 154 |
Self-delusion: literati, lawyers and physicians on poison and class | p. 158 |
Selfishness and selflessness: the case of Gesche Gottfried (Bremen, 1815-1831) | p. 166 |
Self-assertion: Chamisso's Gesche Gottfried (1828) | p. 182 |
The end: the etiquette of execution | p. 187 |
Final scenes: willing confessions, good deaths and grateful corpses | p. 190 |
Final thoughts: the power of the people, the gender of the mob and the progress of civilisation | p. 212 |
Works cited | p. 220 |
Index | p. 260 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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