This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for intimate murders of white British women during 1900–39. It argues that such cases enable analysis of the prevailing emotional norms of this era and the ways in which these were shaped by race, gender and class. Perceptions of intimate relationships as legitimate or illegitimate—judgments about who should feel what about whom—‘is’ related to understandings of citizenship. In revealing the emotional norms at play in cases of murder, it is possible to illustrate how the criminal justice system governed through emotion
As part of a wider project exploring all cases of black and minority ethnic people se...
This article compares the representations of jealousy in popular culture, medical and legal literatu...
This article considers the role of emotion in the eighteenth-century courtroom. It discusses the wor...
This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for ...
This article explores the role of ‘colonial common sense’ (Stoler, 2008) in racialising men of colou...
This article is a microhistory of the capital case of Percy Clifford, a man of colour who was hanged...
This article explores the role of ‘colonial common sense’ (Stoler, 2008) in racialising men of colou...
'Race, Racialisation and the Death Penalty in England and Wales, 1900-65͛ is an interdi...
This thesis is the first legal-historical study of male-perpetrated child homicide cases tried in th...
This article examines the nature and conduct of nineteenth-century courtship through the prism of th...
Research has shown that the general attitudes towards emotions have shifted between different cultur...
This poster will outline a new Leverhulme funded project, Race, Racialisation and the Death Penalty,...
Using one uniquely well-documented murder case from a small Northamptonshire village, this article e...
The last public execution in Newcastle upon Tyne took place in Newcastle Gaol at 8am on Saturday 14t...
Using one uniquely well-documented murder case from a small Northamptonshire village, this article e...
As part of a wider project exploring all cases of black and minority ethnic people se...
This article compares the representations of jealousy in popular culture, medical and legal literatu...
This article considers the role of emotion in the eighteenth-century courtroom. It discusses the wor...
This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for ...
This article explores the role of ‘colonial common sense’ (Stoler, 2008) in racialising men of colou...
This article is a microhistory of the capital case of Percy Clifford, a man of colour who was hanged...
This article explores the role of ‘colonial common sense’ (Stoler, 2008) in racialising men of colou...
'Race, Racialisation and the Death Penalty in England and Wales, 1900-65͛ is an interdi...
This thesis is the first legal-historical study of male-perpetrated child homicide cases tried in th...
This article examines the nature and conduct of nineteenth-century courtship through the prism of th...
Research has shown that the general attitudes towards emotions have shifted between different cultur...
This poster will outline a new Leverhulme funded project, Race, Racialisation and the Death Penalty,...
Using one uniquely well-documented murder case from a small Northamptonshire village, this article e...
The last public execution in Newcastle upon Tyne took place in Newcastle Gaol at 8am on Saturday 14t...
Using one uniquely well-documented murder case from a small Northamptonshire village, this article e...
As part of a wider project exploring all cases of black and minority ethnic people se...
This article compares the representations of jealousy in popular culture, medical and legal literatu...
This article considers the role of emotion in the eighteenth-century courtroom. It discusses the wor...