The Figure of the Criminal in Nineteenth-Century French Science and Literature
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22029/ko.2010.518Abstract
Florian Beckerhoff’s monograph considers conflicting views of the criminal from nineteenth-century French science and literature. Monster und Menschen (Monsters and Men) portrays a fascination with a subject which scientists viewed as a threat to society, but which the literary world saw for its artistic potential. Beckerhoff explains how the figure of the murderer is depicted in fictional and scientific writings, and the extent of similarities in those texts attributed to both discourses. Of particular interest is the question of where these writings locate the killer on a spectrum ranging from man to monster. The author’s conclusion: the scientific understanding of the criminal is of a thinly disguised monster which is, ultimately, to be done away with; the literary evaluation, by contrast, is of a monstrous aspect of normal humanity.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
All articles (not book covers) in KULT_online from issue 50 on are published under the license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. All published articles may be reused under the conditions of the license, particularly for commercial purposes and through editing the article (Human-Readable Summary). All authors (have) permitted the publication under the above mentioned license. There is no copyright transfer towards KULT_online. For all book covers specific rights might be reserved, please contact the respective publisher for any lawful reuse. All contributions published in issue 1-49 of KULT_online are free available online and protected by the German Copyright Law.