ABSTRACT

This ground-breaking collection of research-based chapters addresses the themes of shame, blame and culpability in their historical perspective in the broad area of crime, violence and the modern state, drawing on less familiar territories such as Russia and Greece, not just on material from familiar locations in western Europe. Ranging from the early modern to the late twentieth century, the collection has implications for how we understand punishments imposed by states or the community today.

Shame, blame and culpability is divided into three sections, with a crucial case study part complementing two theoretical parts on shame, and on blame and culpability; exploring the continuance of shaming strategies and examining their interaction with and challenge to 'modern' state-sponsored blaming mechanisms, including allocations of culpability. The collection includes chapters on the deviant body, capital punishment and, of particular interest, Russian case studies, which demonstrate the extent to which the Russian, like the Greek, experience need to be seen as part of a wider European whole when examining ideas and themes.

The volume challenges ideas that shame strategies were largely eradicated in post-Enlightenment western states and societies; showing their survival into the twentieth century as a challenge to state dominance over identification of what constituted 'crime' and also over punishment practices. Shame, blame and culpability will be a key text for students and academics in the fields of criminology and crime, gender or European history.

part I|45 pages

Theorising shame

chapter 1|15 pages

Vergüenza, vergogne, schande, skam and sram

Litigating for shame and dishonour in early modern Europe

chapter 3|17 pages

Towards an agenda for the wider study of shame

Theorising from nineteenth-century British evidence

part II|48 pages

Rethinking blame

chapter 4|17 pages

4 The shifting nature of blame

Revisiting issues of blame, shame and culpability in the English criminal justice system

chapter 5|16 pages

Guilty before the fact?

The deviant body and the chimera of ‘precrime', 1877–1939

chapter 6|13 pages

The ‘convict stain'

Desistance in the penal colony 1

part III|106 pages

Issues of authority in shame, blame and culpability

chapter 7|13 pages

Penance, compensation, terror

The theory and practice of capital punishment in early modern France

chapter 8|17 pages

Hurt, harm and humiliation

Community responses to deviant behaviour in early modern Scotland

chapter 9|11 pages

Violence against honour

Shame and the crime of rape in the age of the Greek Revolution (1821–1828)

chapter 10|16 pages

‘Treat them according to the European tradition'

The discourse of blaming the poor, the problem of professional beggars and attitudes to poverty in modern Russia

chapter 12|15 pages

Insulting the Russian royal family

Crime, blame and its sources

chapter 13|16 pages

Crime and culpability in the community, the newspapers and the courts

The case of the feuding society of Crete (Greece)