Murderesses in German Writing, 1720–1860: Heroines of Horror

by
Edition: 1st
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2009-05-29
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

The way deviant women - murderesses, witches, vampires - are perceived and represented reveals much about what a society considers the norm for acceptable female behaviour. Drawing on extensive archival records and published texts, Susanne Kord investigates the stories of eight famous murderesses in Germany as they were told in legal, psychological, philosophical and literary writings. Kord interrogates the role of representation in legal judgment and the way the emancipation of women was perceived to be linked to their crimes. She demonstrates how perceptions of normal and criminal women permeated not only legal thought but also seemingly unrelated cultural spheres - from poetry, philosophy and physiognomy to early psychological profiling. A major work of German cultural history, this highly original book raises thought-provoking questions about eighteenth- and nineteenth-century gender norms in ways that continue to resonate today.

Table of Contents

List of illustrationsp. vii
Acknowledgmentsp. viii
Criminal women: on bodies, paradoxes, performances and talesp. 1
A game in the dark: the principle of paradoxp. 1
The gender of crime: testimoniesp. 5
In the hall of mirrors: theories of investigationp. 12
Searching the scene of the crime: modus operandip. 17
The evil eye: witchesp. 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: vampiresp. 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) restp. 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-killersp. 82
Murderous marriages and marriage as murderp. 82
The case of Maria Katharina Wäet;chtler (Hamburg, 1786-1788) and the debate on torturep. 86
The case of Christiane Ruthardt (Stuttgart, 1844-1845) and the death-penalty debatep. 105
The ethical mandate and the aesthetics of horrorp. 115
Shame: child-killersp. 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: poisonersp. 154
The self-evident and evidence: criminologists and psychologists on poison and genderp. 154
Self-delusion: literati, lawyers and physicians on poison and classp. 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 executionp. 187
Final scenes: willing confessions, good deaths and grateful corpsesp. 190
Final thoughts: the power of the people, the gender of the mob and the progress of civilisationp. 212
Works citedp. 220
Indexp. 260
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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