Synopses & Reviews
This book examines the history of insanity pleas in the English legal system and the ways in which defendants and their families defined and evaded responsibility for crime. By exploring cases of infanticide and other crimes, Dana Rabin brings new insights into the development of legal ideas of responsibility and the self in eighteenth-century England.
Synopsis
During the eighteenth century English defendants, victims, witnesses, judges, and jurors spoke a language of the mind. With their reputations or lives at stake, men and women presented their complex emotions and passions as grounds for acquittal or mitigation of punishment. Inside the courtroom the language of excuse reshaped crimes and punishments, signalling a shift in the age-old negotiation of mitigation. Outside the courtroom the language of the mind reflected society's preoccupation with questions of sensibility, responsibility, and the self.
Synopsis
With their reputations or lives at stake, ordinary men and women in the Eighteenth Century presented their complex emotions and passions as grounds for acquittal or mitigation of punishment. To account for their criminal behaviour and to excuse it, they claimed a space between the coherent self and the insane self: the 'displaced' self. This language had complicated implications within the context of sensibility and the concern with the self that was so distinguishing a characteristic of the Eighteenth Century. English legal culture struggled not only to contain and to direct the 'ungovernable passions' but also to define the integrated, controlled, and controllable self: what scholars would later call the modern subject. The insights about self and subjectivity generated by this study contribute to our understanding of the relationship between the individual and the state and look toward the impact of these developments on the formation of Britain as a nation. By combining social, cultural, and legal history this study reveals the subtleties of the relationship between emotion, responsibility, gender, class and citizenship in the Eighteenth Century and their concrete implications for real people.
About the Author
Dana Rabin is Professor of History at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.