The role played by the press in shaping emotions is a topic of increasing interest. Moral panics and sexual scandals have long been recognised as key discursive sites in the shaping of modern Britain. This article contributes to that debate with an exploration of how the late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century press shaped an emotional public opinion through the reporting of breach of promise and seduction suits. It argues that the press directed men into roles as defenders of the nation through their protection of female virtue, using emotion to invest the British public in nation-building.Katie Barcla
This article reconstructs the circumstances of the little-known Edward S. W. De Cobain gross indecen...
Tis article discusses emotions and power in the administration and representation of criminal justic...
This article provides the first comprehensive study of the British press’s reporting of, and discuss...
Scholars of emotion and the law have sought to demonstrate the significant role emotion plays in sha...
Around thirty years ago, inspired partly by the publication of Lawrence Stone's The Family, Sex and ...
This paper uses scandals involving sexual transgressions as a way to study social norms, values, and...
This article explores the cultural and social dimensions of male tears in early modern England, and ...
A fixed legal age of consent is used to determine when a person has the capacity to consent to sex y...
This article surveys the current literature on the histories of eighteenth-century British demograph...
This article reconsiders ideas of the public sphere in the seventeenth century, by focusing on how p...
Taken from a ‘humorous’ ditty sold alongside the trial of a man for abducting an heiress, the above ...
This article reconsiders ideas of the public sphere in the seventeenth century, by focusing on how p...
This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for ...
This collection studies the function of emotions in group formations in Britain during a period that...
In this Article, Professor Pruitt discusses conceptions of the injury associated with defamation law...
This article reconstructs the circumstances of the little-known Edward S. W. De Cobain gross indecen...
Tis article discusses emotions and power in the administration and representation of criminal justic...
This article provides the first comprehensive study of the British press’s reporting of, and discuss...
Scholars of emotion and the law have sought to demonstrate the significant role emotion plays in sha...
Around thirty years ago, inspired partly by the publication of Lawrence Stone's The Family, Sex and ...
This paper uses scandals involving sexual transgressions as a way to study social norms, values, and...
This article explores the cultural and social dimensions of male tears in early modern England, and ...
A fixed legal age of consent is used to determine when a person has the capacity to consent to sex y...
This article surveys the current literature on the histories of eighteenth-century British demograph...
This article reconsiders ideas of the public sphere in the seventeenth century, by focusing on how p...
Taken from a ‘humorous’ ditty sold alongside the trial of a man for abducting an heiress, the above ...
This article reconsiders ideas of the public sphere in the seventeenth century, by focusing on how p...
This article examines 10 capital cases of men of colour sentenced to death in England and Wales for ...
This collection studies the function of emotions in group formations in Britain during a period that...
In this Article, Professor Pruitt discusses conceptions of the injury associated with defamation law...
This article reconstructs the circumstances of the little-known Edward S. W. De Cobain gross indecen...
Tis article discusses emotions and power in the administration and representation of criminal justic...
This article provides the first comprehensive study of the British press’s reporting of, and discuss...