The Truth Machine (40 page)

Read The Truth Machine Online

Authors: Geoffrey C. Bunn

BOOK: The Truth Machine
4.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

90
. Ibid., 57–58.

91
. Ibid., 50.

92
. Ibid., 99.

93
. Ibid., 100–101.

94
. Ibid., 107.

95
. Quoted in Marvin E. Wolfgang, “Cesare Lombroso, 1835–1909,” in
Pioneers in Criminology,
ed. Hermann Mannheim, 2nd ed. (Montclair: Patterson Smith, 1972), 255.

96
. Lombroso and Ferrero,
The Female Offender,
101.

97
. Ibid., 102.

98
. Ibid., 107–111.

99
. Ibid., 110.

100
. Albrecht, “Cesare Lombroso,” 77.

101
. Havelock Ellis,
The Criminal,
5th ed. (London: The Walter Scott Publishing Co., 1916), 268.

102
. Albrecht, “Cesare Lombroso,” 79.

103
. Lombroso and Ferrero,
The Female Offender,
150–51.

104
. Albrecht, “Cesare Lombroso,” 79.

105
. Francis Galton,
Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development,
2nd ed. (London: J. M. Dent and Sons, 1907), 20–21.

106
. David Horn, “Making Criminologists: Tools, Techniques, and the Production of Scientific Authority,” in
Criminals and their Scientists: The History of Criminology in International Perspective,
ed. Peter Becker and Richard F. Wetzell (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006), 322–23.

107
. Horn,
The Criminal Body,
89.

108
. Cesare Lombroso, “The Physical Insensibility of Women,”
Fortnightly Review
n.s. 51 (1892): 354–57.

109
. Mary Gibson, “On the Insensitivity of Women: Science and the Woman Question in Liberal Italy, 1890–1910,”
Journal of Women's History
2, no. 2 (1990): 11–41.

110
. Gibson,
Born to Crime,
chap. 2.

111
. Cited in Hurley,
The Gothic Body,
98.

112
. Lombroso and Ferrero,
The Female Offender,
151.

113
. Thomas M. Dixon,
From Passions to Emotions: The Creation of a Secular Psychological Category
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 164.

114
. Quoted in Hutchings,
The Criminal Spectre,
102.

115
. M. E. Owen, “Criminal Women,”
Cornhill Magazine
14 (August 1866): 152–53.

116
. Charles Darwin,
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals
(New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1873), 334.

117
. Darwin,
Expression of the Emotions,
346–47.

118
. Horn, “Making Criminologists,” 331.

119
. Havelock Ellis,
The Criminal,
138.

120
. Darwin,
Expression of the Emotions,
326.

121
. Dixon,
From Passions to Emotion.

122
. Otniel E. Dror, “The Scientific Image of Emotion: Experience and Technologies of Inscription,”
Configurations
7, no. 3 (1999): 357.

123
. Anson Rabinbach,
The Human Motor: Energy, Fatigue, and the Origins of Modernity
(New York: Basic, 1990), 96.

124
. Dror, “The Scientific Image of Emotion,” 358.

125
. Ibid.

126
. Otniel E. Dror, “Techniques of the Brain and the Paradox of Emotions, 1880–1930,”
Science in Context
14, no. 4 (2001): 646.

127
. Horn,
The Criminal Body,
119.

128
. Ibid., 122.

129
. Wolfgang, “Cesare Lombroso, 1835–1909,” 237.

130
. Horn,
The Criminal Body,
96; Hurley,
The Gothic Body,
100.

131
. Horn, “Making Criminologists,” 321.

132
. Horn,
The Criminal Body,
26.

133
. Lombroso (1891) quoted in Hurley,
The Gothic Body,
101.

134
. Leps,
Apprehending the Criminal,
47.

135
. Quoted in Horn,
The Criminal Body,
127.

136
. Horn,
The Criminal Body,
128.

137
. J[oseph] J[astrow], “Illustrations of Recent Italian Psychology,”
Science
6, no. 144 (November 6, 1885): 413–15.

138
. Lombroso and Ferrero, quoted in Horn,
The Criminal Body,
126.

139
. Horn,
The Criminal Body,
84.

140
. Cited in Horn,
The Criminal Body,
85.

141
. Ibid., 86.

142
. Enrico Ferri,
Criminal Sociology,
trans. “W. D. M.” (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1895), 166–67.

143
. Gabriel Tarde,
Penal Philosophy,
trans. Rapelje Howell (Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1912), 63–64.

144
. Gina Lombroso-Ferrero,
Criminal Man: According to the Classification of Cesare Lombroso
(Montclair: Patterson Smith, 1911/1972), 223.

145
. Ibid., 224–25.

146
. Arthur Macdonald, “The Study of Crime and Criminals,”
The Chautauquan
18 (1893): 265–70.

147
. Ibid., 268–69.

148
. Cesare Lombroso,
Crime: Its Causes and Remedies
(Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1911), 254.

149
. See Helen Zimmern, “Criminal Anthropology in Italy,”
Popular Science Monthly
52, 1897–98, 743–60.

150
. Quoted in Hutchings,
The Criminal Spectre,
107.

151
. Ibid., 110.

152
. Horn,
The Criminal Body,
141.

153
. Ibid., 87.

154
. Young,
Imagining Crime,
27.

Chapter 4. “Fearful errors lurk in our nuptial couches”: The Critique of Criminal Anthropology

Epigraph.
Alfred Austin, “Our Novels: The Sensation School,”
Temple Bar
29 (1879): 422.

1
. John Kucich,
The Power of Lies: Transgression in Victorian Fiction
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1994).

2
. Martin J. Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal: Culture, Law, and Policy in England, 1830–1914
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990), 245.

3
. Ibid., 244.

4
. Kate Summerscale,
The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher or The Murder at Road Hill House
(London: Bloomsbury, 2008), xi.

5
. “Celebrated Crimes and Criminals—No. XIII,”
The Sporting Times
1248, Saturday, August 20, 1887, 2.

6
. Peter J. Hutchings,
The Criminal Spectre in Law, Literature and Aesthetics
(London: Routledge, 2001), 28.

7
. Ronald R. Thomas, “The Lie Detector and the Thinking Machine,” in
Detective Fiction and the Rise of Forensic Science
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), 35.

8
. Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
247.

9
. Alfred Austin, “Our Novels: The Sensational School,”
Temple Bar
29 (June 1870): 422.

10
. Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
248.

11
. Hutchings,
The Criminal Spectre,
93.

12
. Alison Young,
Imagining Crime: Textual Outlaws and Criminal Conversations
(London: Sage, 1996), 109.

13
. Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
245.

14
. Marie-Christine Leps,
Apprehending the Criminal: The Production of Deviance in Nineteenth-Century Discourse
(Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1992), 94.

15
. Ibid., 99.

16
. Ibid., 113.

17
. Daniel Pick,
Faces of Degeneration: A European Disorder, c. 1848–1918
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 4.

18
. Ibid., 163.

19
. Nils Clausson, “Degeneration, Fin-de-Siècle Gothic, and the Science of Detection: Arthur Conan Doyle's
The Hound of the Baskervilles
and the Emergence of the Modern Detective Story,”
Journal of Narrative Theory
35, no. 1 (2005): 64, 76.

20
. Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
173.

21
. Nicole Hahn Rafter,
Creating Born Criminals
(Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 1997), 38.

22
. Kelly Hurley,
The Gothic Body: Sexuality, Materialism, and Degeneration at the Fin-de-Siècle
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 4.

23
. Ibid., 63.

24
. Ibid., 4.

25
. Ibid., 60.

26
. Peter J. Bowler,
The Non-Darwinian Revolution: Reinterpreting a Historical Myth
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988).

27
. Hurley,
The Gothic Body,
8.

28
. Leps,
Apprehending the Criminal,
218.

29
. Quoted in Pick,
Faces of Degeneration,
171.

30
. Hutchings,
The Criminal Spectre,
12.

31
. Pick,
Faces of Degeneration,
171.

32
. Conan Doyle, “A Scandal in Bohemia” (1891), quoted in Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
222.

33
. Quoted in Clausson, “Degeneration,” 61.

34
. Quoted in Clausson, “Degeneration,” 74–75, 97 (emphasis added).

35
. Ibid., 63.

36
. Judith Wilt, “The Imperial Mouth: Imperialism, the Gothic and Science Fiction.”
Journal of Popular Culture
14, no. 4 (1981): 618–28.

37
. Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
223.

38
. See Ronald R. Thomas, “The Fingerprints of the Foreigner: Colonizing the Criminal Body in 1980s Detective Fiction and Criminal Anthropology,”
ELH
61, no. 3 (1994): 655–83.

39
. Quoted in Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
220.

40
. Clausson, “Degeneration,” 77.

41
. Hutchings,
The Criminal Spectre,
187.

42
. Conan Doyle, “The Final Problem” (1893), quoted in Hutchings,
The Criminal Spectre,
194.

43
. Lombroso in
The Man of Genius
(1864/1891), quoted in Hurley,
The Gothic Body,
67.

44
. Hutchings,
The Criminal Spectre,
194–95.

45
. Quoted in Hurley,
The Gothic Body,
42.

46
. Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
251–52.

47
. Pick,
Faces of Degeneration,
158.

48
. Hurley,
The Gothic Body,
104.

49
. Ibid., 103.

50
. Ibid., 109. Moreau's namesake was Jacques-Joseph Moreau, whose
Morbid Psychology
(1859) posited that the over-excitation of the intellect atrophies the moral sensibility. The book was also an inspiration for Lombroso.

51
. Hurley,
The Gothic Body,
108.

52
. Ibid., 113.

53
. Marion Shaw, “‘To Tell the Truth of Sex': Confession and Abjection in Late Victorian Writing,” in
Rewriting the Victorians: Theory, History, and the Politics of Gender,
ed. Linda M. Shires (New York: Routledge, 1992), 92.

54
. Wiener,
Reconstructing the Criminal,
254.

55
. Piers Beirne, “Heredity vs Environment: A Reconsideration of Charles Goring's
The English Convict
(1913),”
British Journal of Criminology
28 (1988): 315–39.

56
. W. D. Morrison, “The Study of Crime,”
Mind
n.s. 1, no. 4 (October 1892): 489–517.

57
. Ibid., 506, 508.

58
. “Review of
Criminology
by Arthur MacDonald,”
Science
21, no. 523 (February 10, 1893): 83.

59
. Gustave Tarde, “Is There a Criminal Type?,”
Charities Review
6, no. 2 (April 1897): 110.

60
. Dr. H. S. Williams, “Can the Criminal Be Reclaimed?,”
North American Review
163, no. 2 (August 1896): 207–18.

61
. Ibid., 207.

62
. Ibid., 208

63
. Ibid., 210.

64
. Ibid., 211.

65
. Ibid., 212.

66
. Ibid., 213.

67
. Ibid., 217.

68
. Ibid., 213.

69
. Ibid., 216.

70
. Frances Alice Kellor, “Sex in Crime,”
International Journal of Ethics
9, no. 1 (October 1898): 74–85.

71
. Ibid., 76.

72
. Ibid., 81.

73
. Ibid., 82.

74
. Frances A. Kellor, “Psychological and Environmental Study of Women Criminals I,”
The American Journal of Sociology
5, no. 4 (January 1900): 527–43; Frances A. Kellor, “Psychological and Environmental Study of Women Criminals II,”
The American Journal of Sociology
5, no. 5 (March 1900): 671–82.

75
. Kellor, “Psychological and Environmental Study I,” 528.

76
. Kellor, “Psychological and Environmental Study II,” 682.

77
. Kellor, “Psychological and Environmental Study I,” 529.

78
. Ibid., 530.

79
. Ibid., 531.

80
. Ibid., 532.

81
. Ibid., 532.

Other books

The Night the Sky Fell by Stephen Levy
Summer Love by RaShelle Workman
Raking the Ashes by Anne Fine
Child of the Dead by Don Coldsmith
Captive Innocence by Fern Michaels
A Gentle Hell by Christian, Autumn
Root by A. Sparrow
White Cloud Retreat by Dianne Harman