Jack the Ripper & the London Press
eBook - ePub

Jack the Ripper & the London Press

  1. 363 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Jack the Ripper & the London Press

Book details
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

"Breaks new ground in its examination of the role of newspaper reporting during the police hunt for the first notorious serial killer."— Reviews in History Press coverage of the 1888 mutilation murders attributed to Jack the Ripper was of necessity filled with gaps and silences, for the killer remained unknown and Victorian journalists had little experience reporting serial murders and sex crimes. This engrossing book examines how fourteen London newspapers—dailies and weeklies, highbrow and lowbrow—presented the Ripper news, in the process revealing much about the social, political, and sexual anxieties of late Victorian Britain and the role of journalists in reinforcing social norms. L. Perry Curtis surveys the mass newspaper culture of the era, delving into the nature of sensationalism and the conventions of domestic murder news. Analyzing the fourteen newspapers—two of which emanated from the East End, where the murders took place—he shows how journalists played on the fears of readers about law and order by dwelling on lethal violence rather than sex, offering gruesome details about knife injuries but often withholding some of the more intimate details of the pelvic mutilations. He also considers how the Ripper news affected public perceptions of social conditions in Whitechapel. "The apparently motiveless violence of the Whitechapel killings denied journalists a structure, and it is the resulting creativity in news reporting that L Perry Curtis Jr describes. His impressive book makes a genuine contribution to 19th-century history in a way that books addressing the banal question of the identity of the Ripper do not."— The Guardian

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Information

Year
2001
ISBN
9780300133691

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Introduction
  7. Chapter One The Whitechapel Murders A CHRONICLE
  8. Chapter Two Images and Realities of the East End
  9. Chapter Three The Theory and Practice of Victorian Journalism
  10. Chapter Four Sensation News
  11. Chapter Five Victorian Murder News
  12. Chapter Six The First Two Murders
  13. Chapter Seven The Double Event
  14. Chapter Eight The Pursuit of Angles
  15. Chapter Nine The Kelly Reportage
  16. Chapter Ten The inquests REPORTING THE FEMALE BODY
  17. Chapter Eleven Responses to Ripper News LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
  18. Chapter Twelve The Cultural Politics of Ripper News
  19. Notes
  20. Acknowledgments
  21. Index