ABSTRACT

Criminal biographies enjoyed enormous popularity in the Eighteenth Century: today they offer us some fascinating perspectives on the period. Drunks, Whores and Idle Apprentices is the first book to reproduce a number of these biographies in full.
Not only do these biographies make fascinating reading, they also raise the problem of how to read them as historical documents. The author argues that instead of trying to uncover simple themes, the most revealing thing about them is the tensions around which they were constructed.

chapter |31 pages

General Introduction

chapter 1|2 pages

The History of...John Sheppard (1724)

chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

THE HISTORY OF…JOHN SHEPPARD (1724)

part II|2 pages

THE LIFE AND ACTIONS OF JAMES DALTON (1730)

chapter 3|5 pages

INTRODUCTION

part III|2 pages

THE ORDINARY OF NEWGATE’S ACCOUNT: MARY YOUNG (1741)

chapter 5|7 pages

INTRODUCTION

part IV|2 pages

THE DISCOVERIES OF JOHN POULTER (1753-4)

chapter 7|7 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 8|30 pages

THE DISCOVERIES OF JOHN POULTER (1753–4)

part V|2 pages

THE LIFE, TRAVELS, EXPLOITS, FRAUDS AND ROBBERIES OF CHARLES SPECKMAN (1763)

chapter 9|3 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 16|9 pages

5 Index