Description

Book Synopsis
Jack the Ripper: Media, culture, history re-assesses the most important and sensational murder case of the nineteenth century. Leading scholars in the fields of history, media and cultural studies debate the influence of 'Jack' on race, gender, the press, fiction, film and the city of London.

Table of Contents

Introduction - Alexandra Warwick and Martin Willis
Part 1: Media
1. The house that Jack built - Christopher Frayling
2. The pursuit of angles - L. Perry Curtis
3. Casting the spell of terror: the press and the early Whitechapel Murders - Darren Oldridge
4. Order out of chaos - Gary Coville and Patrick Lucanio
5. Blood and ink: narrating the Whitechapel Murders - Alexandra Warwick
Part 2: Culture
6. The Ripper writing: a cream of a nightmare dream - Clive Bloom
7. The Whitechapel Murders and the medical gaze - Andrew Smith
8. ‘Jonathan’s great knife’: Dracula meets Jack the Ripper - Nicholas Rance
9. Jack the Ripper, Sherlock Holmes and the narrative of detection - Martin Willis
10. Living in the slashing grounds: Jack the Ripper, monopoly rent and the new heritage - David Cunningham
Part 3 History
11. Narratives of sexual danger - Judith Walkowitz
12. Jack the Ripper as the threat of outcast London - Robert F. Haggard
13. ‘Who kills whores?’ ‘I do’, says Jack: race and gender in Victorian London - Sander L. Gilman
14. East End 1888 - William Fishman

jacktherippermediaculturehistory

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    A Paperback by Alexandra Warwick, Martin Willis

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      View other formats and editions of jacktherippermediaculturehistory by Alexandra Warwick

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 8/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719074943, 978-0719074943
      ISBN10: 0719074940

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Jack the Ripper: Media, culture, history re-assesses the most important and sensational murder case of the nineteenth century. Leading scholars in the fields of history, media and cultural studies debate the influence of 'Jack' on race, gender, the press, fiction, film and the city of London.

      Table of Contents

      Introduction - Alexandra Warwick and Martin Willis
      Part 1: Media
      1. The house that Jack built - Christopher Frayling
      2. The pursuit of angles - L. Perry Curtis
      3. Casting the spell of terror: the press and the early Whitechapel Murders - Darren Oldridge
      4. Order out of chaos - Gary Coville and Patrick Lucanio
      5. Blood and ink: narrating the Whitechapel Murders - Alexandra Warwick
      Part 2: Culture
      6. The Ripper writing: a cream of a nightmare dream - Clive Bloom
      7. The Whitechapel Murders and the medical gaze - Andrew Smith
      8. ‘Jonathan’s great knife’: Dracula meets Jack the Ripper - Nicholas Rance
      9. Jack the Ripper, Sherlock Holmes and the narrative of detection - Martin Willis
      10. Living in the slashing grounds: Jack the Ripper, monopoly rent and the new heritage - David Cunningham
      Part 3 History
      11. Narratives of sexual danger - Judith Walkowitz
      12. Jack the Ripper as the threat of outcast London - Robert F. Haggard
      13. ‘Who kills whores?’ ‘I do’, says Jack: race and gender in Victorian London - Sander L. Gilman
      14. East End 1888 - William Fishman

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