Chapter 1: Debates and Developments in the fields of Crime History and
Women's History: Frameworks, Methodolozies and Consolidation.
This chapter falls into three sections. The first outlines some key issues in Crime
History. The second examines the development of women's history and discusses
the introduction of gender into Crime History. It is argued that the new issues
that have arisen from the joining of these two disciplines have enhanced the
development of Crime History. The third section discusses women's history and
the study of crime and gender in the early modem period, the source material
used and methodology employed in this thesis.
Chapter 2: Economy and Socie!y in the South West of England: The Female
Experience
This chapter provides the social and economic background to the study of
eighteenth-century female criminality in this region. It argues that the region
constituted a pastoral rural economy; and it is within this context that the
recorded criminal activities of women should be seen. The discussion develops,
using the work of scholars who have examined this area of women's history, into
an account of the roles and lifecycles of eighteenth-century women in these
communities.
Chapter 3: Female Theft in the South West
This chapter falls into two distinct sections. The first is a broad examination of all
recorded female property offencesi n the period. The study assessestr ends over
-ivtime,
using material from the Assizes Gaol Book and the Quarter Sessions
Indictments. It discusses relationships between levels of prosecution and food
prices and periods of war. It also seeks to identify possible reasons which types of
goods were commonly recorded as stolen and discusses any trends for the
prosecution of these thefts over time.
The second part of the chapter is a detailed examination of the detection and
prosecution of theft during the period. An emphasis has been placed on the
importance of the sorts of goods stolen, as well as how they were stolen and,
consequently, the type of offender most vulnerable of detection and prosecution.
The section moves to focus on clothing theft and its relationship to trading
networks in the eighteenth century. It places the examination of this networking
within the context of the eighteenth-century clothing trade.
Chapter 4: Offences Against the Person
The first section of Chapter 4 concentrates on the record of assault and disorder
found in the quarter sessions rolls and the assizes gaol books. It is argued that the
increased use of recognizances to prosecute demonstrates the flexibility of the
eighteenth-century criminal justice system. Also discussed in the section, are how
assaults may be linked to other offences such as theft and how some assaults
constituted unofficial punishments by communities. Although avoiding making
too broad a statement about assault and disorder, it seeks to demonstrate that
some cases could be representative of womenýs interests in both the public and
private sphere.
The second section of Chapter 4 discusses the record of homicide and infanticide
for the western circuit assizes between 1735 and 1785. The section examines
homicide, which seemed to predominantly occur within the familial setting. This
includes the specific homicide offence of petty treason. The discussion moves on
to examine infanticide, by far the most prominent female homicide offence
recorded. The circumstances surrounding each case and the consequences of its
discovery are examined. It is argued that a stereotyped narrative of the
infanticidal woman dictated the prosecution and conviction rates of the offence.
Date of Award | 2000 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Richard Williams (Other Supervisor) |
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Criminality of women in the 18th century in the South West of England
Williams, A. A. (Author). 2000
Student thesis: PhD