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Crime and Criminology in the Eye of the Novelist: Trends in Nineteenth Century Literature

NCJ Number
238805
Journal
Howard Journal of Criminal Justice Volume: 51 Issue: 2 Dated: May 2012 Pages: 160-172
Author(s)
Elizabeth Burney
Date Published
May 2012
Length
13 pages
Annotation
This article takes examples from English, French and Russian literature to illustrate causes of crime.
Abstract
Many leading novelists of the 19th century were deeply concerned with crime and its causes, reflecting concerns of the period and often raising ideas which find resonance with modern criminological theories. The structural causes of crime; the negative effect of ill-treatment and harsh punishment; labeling theory; the possibility of redemption and desistance; the ingrained flaws in individual characters which result in a propensity to crime and deviance, enhanced by bad influences and criminogenic environments; the social pressures (labeled 'strain theory' by criminologists) which drive outsiders to gain wealth and status by illegitimate means ¨C all these can be found in fiction of the period. This article takes examples from English, French and Russian literature to illustrate these themes. The article also links fiction to the development of perceptions about crime and criminals as the century progressed. (Published Abstract)