Exploring the little-known medium of the English crime scene miniature, this chapter removes the roof of the ‘bungalow of death’ and invites us to peer inside. Tiny scale models of murder scenes, like that of the Crumbles bungalow where Patrick Mahon killed Emily Kaye in 1924, appeared in nineteenth- and twentieth-century courtrooms more frequently than the historical record suggests. The result is that these little likenesses have been overlooked in the literature on crime and forensics in the past, underestimating the significance of spatialized understandings of evidence and visual representations of crime scenes in court. This chapter explores the larger methodological implications of murder miniatures for sources about crime and trials...
During the nineteenth century there was a surge in violent crime. The creation of the printing press...
Although historians have long recognized that crime pamphlet authors were not very faithful reporter...
This thesis explores how burglars and burglary in London were understood in cultural, criminological...
This paper uses case files for murder trials at the Old Bailey in the mid-twentieth century to exami...
This paper uses case files for murder trials at the Old Bailey in the 1950s and 60s to examine the w...
This paper develops the topic introduced at the Histories of Home Subject Specialist Network seminar...
This paper builds on the work of my thesis to argue for a wider use of criminal case files in twenti...
Tales from the Hanging Court draws on published accounts of Old Bailey trials from 1674-1834, a rich...
Alexa Neale uses the case study of an alleged murder in a mews in Knightsbridge in 1932 to investiga...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DN047964 / BLDSC - British Library Do...
In the early nineteenth century, London’s illegitimate playhouses featured melodramas based on murde...
How was crime and justice news constructed in the late eighteenth century? This paper uses a compari...
From the Murder Act of 1752 until the Anatomy Act of 1832 it was forbidden to bury the bodies of exe...
It reflects on current approaches to crime scene photography described in numerous photographic publ...
The Murder Act (1752) is an infamous piece of penal legislation, known as the Bloody Code. It create...
During the nineteenth century there was a surge in violent crime. The creation of the printing press...
Although historians have long recognized that crime pamphlet authors were not very faithful reporter...
This thesis explores how burglars and burglary in London were understood in cultural, criminological...
This paper uses case files for murder trials at the Old Bailey in the mid-twentieth century to exami...
This paper uses case files for murder trials at the Old Bailey in the 1950s and 60s to examine the w...
This paper develops the topic introduced at the Histories of Home Subject Specialist Network seminar...
This paper builds on the work of my thesis to argue for a wider use of criminal case files in twenti...
Tales from the Hanging Court draws on published accounts of Old Bailey trials from 1674-1834, a rich...
Alexa Neale uses the case study of an alleged murder in a mews in Knightsbridge in 1932 to investiga...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DN047964 / BLDSC - British Library Do...
In the early nineteenth century, London’s illegitimate playhouses featured melodramas based on murde...
How was crime and justice news constructed in the late eighteenth century? This paper uses a compari...
From the Murder Act of 1752 until the Anatomy Act of 1832 it was forbidden to bury the bodies of exe...
It reflects on current approaches to crime scene photography described in numerous photographic publ...
The Murder Act (1752) is an infamous piece of penal legislation, known as the Bloody Code. It create...
During the nineteenth century there was a surge in violent crime. The creation of the printing press...
Although historians have long recognized that crime pamphlet authors were not very faithful reporter...
This thesis explores how burglars and burglary in London were understood in cultural, criminological...