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Modern Literature and the Death Penalty, 1890-1950

Palgrave Macmillan

Authors:

  • Examines how literature represents and participates in debates around capital punishment in the first half of the twentieth century
  • Incorporates original archival work on penal policy and unearths neglected literary and cultural texts
  • Argues for the importance of the wider dissemination of psychology, which affected public perceptions of the death penalty and its representation in texts

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages i-ix
  2. Modern Cultures of the Death Penalty

    • Katherine Ebury
    Pages 1-27
  3. Confession and the Self

    • Katherine Ebury
    Pages 29-59
  4. The Gothic Death Penalty

    • Katherine Ebury
    Pages 61-87
  5. Animals and Modern Capital Punishment

    • Katherine Ebury
    Pages 117-139
  6. Race, Lynching and the Colonial Death Penalty

    • Katherine Ebury
    Pages 197-222
  7. Back Matter

    Pages 251-282

About this book

This book examines how the cultural and ethical power of literature allowed writers and readers to reflect on the practice of capital punishment in the UK, Ireland and the US between 1890 and 1950. It explores how connections between ‘high’ and ‘popular’ culture seem particularly inextricable where the death penalty is at stake, analysing a range of forms including major works of canonical literature, detective fiction, plays, polemics, criminological and psychoanalytic tracts and letters and memoirs. The book addresses conceptual understandings of the modern death penalty, including themes such as confession, the gothic, life-writing and the human-animal binary. It also discusses the role of conflict in shaping the representation of capital punishment, including chapters on the Easter Rising, on World War I, on colonial and quasi-colonial conflict and on World War II. Ebury’s overall approach aims to improve our understanding of the centrality of the death penalty and the role it played in major twentieth century literary movements and historical events.

Reviews

“Ebury’s book is a rich archive of sources, suggestive connections, and strong readings of interest to scholars of modern literature. … Ebury’s book will be of interest to scholars of modern literature, psychoanalysis, and law, for it effectively makes the case that reading the ways these discourses are braided together in the history of capital punishment is not just generative but necessary.” (Ariela Freedman, James Joyce Quarterly, Vol. 59 (3), 2022)

"Through an impressive range of literary works, legal cases, and primary sources, Katherine Ebury's important book offers a fresh and powerful interpretation of how the death penalty changed the modernist literary landscape, and how modernism took up the ethical problems raised by its imposition. Ebury’s work sheds light on the submerged juridical and political charge in narrative, connecting it deftly to its historical moment and revealing the intimate ties between literature and law."                                       

—Ravit Reichman, Brown University


 "Katherine Ebury leads us through a compelling discussion of the death penalty in literature in the first half of the twentieth century, drawing on a rich range of publications, from golden-age detective fiction to memoir to canonical works, such as Richard Wright’s Native Son. Eburyputs these works into rewarding conversation with key thinkers of the era in sociology, psychoanalysis and legal theory. In doing so, Ebury provides valuable new perspectives on how the death penalty operated as subject and trope within literature and larger discourses of crime and punishment. Chapters on Executioners’ life-writing, for example, and the place of animals in thinking about capital punishment, transform our understanding of those discourses in surprising and fruitful ways. Modern Literature and the Death Penalty, 1890-1950 is essential reading for anyone interested in the place of the death penalty in the Anglo-Atlantic cultural imagination of the twentieth century."

—Katherine Baxter, University of Northumbria

 

"In rigorous and fascinating detail, Katherine Ebury shows the profound influence that literature’s responses to the death penalty had on public debates about capital punishment. Ebury’s discussion of the ambivalence that authors such as Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, and Elizabeth Bowen had towards to the death penalty shows us new aspects of some of the twentieth century’s most influential writers about crime and the psychological subject. With this book, Katherine Ebury breaks new ground, bringing together high modernist and popular literature to show the effect of psychoanalysis on writers’ discussion of criminality and capital punishment."

—Lauren Arrington, Maynooth University

Authors and Affiliations

  • School of English, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK

    Katherine Ebury

About the author

Katherine Ebury is Senior Lecturer in Modern Literature at the University of Sheffield, UK. Her previous publications include Modernism and Cosmology (2014) and Joyce’s Non-Fiction Writings (2018), as well as several articles and chapters. The present volume has been generously supported by an AHRC Leadership Fellowship.


Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 49.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as EPUB and PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book USD 64.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
Hardcover Book USD 89.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access