The Crime Wave: Recent Writing on Crime and Criminal Justice in Eighteenth-Century England
- 1 October 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of British Studies
- Vol. 25 (4) , 380-435
- https://doi.org/10.1086/385872
Abstract
One of the most exciting and influential areas of research in eighteenth-century history over the last fifteen years has been the study of crime and the criminal law. It is the purpose of this essay to map the subject for the interested nonspecialist: to ask why historians have chosen to study it, to explain how they have come to approach it in particular ways, to describe something of what they have found, to evaluate those findings, and to suggest fruitful directions for further research. Like all maps, the one presented here is selective. The essay begins with a general analysis of the ways in which the field has developed and changed in its short life. It then proceeds to consider in more detail four areas of study: criminality, the criminal trial, punishment, and criminal legislation. This selection makes no pretense of providing an exhaustive coverage. A number of important areas have been omitted: for example, public order and policing. However, the areas covered illustrate the range of approaches, problems, and possibilities that lie within the field. The essay concludes with a discussion of the broader implications of the subject.The Development of the FieldBefore the 1960s crime was not treated seriously by eighteenth-century historians. Accounts of crime and the criminal law rarely extended beyond a few brief remarks on lawlessness, the Bloody Code, and the state of the prisons, often culled from Fielding, Hogarth, and Howard. There were exceptions, but they fell outside the mainstream of eighteenth-century history. The multiple volumes of Leon Radzinowicz's monumentalHistory of the English Criminal Law and Its Administration from 1750began to appear in 1948, but Radzinowicz worked in the Cambridge Law Faculty and the Institute of Criminology, and, as Derek Beales has pointed out, his findings were not quickly assimilated by historians.This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- By Rite: Custom, Ceremony, and Community in England, 1700-1880The American Historical Review, 1988
- Property and Political TheorySouthern Economic Journal, 1985
- The Transportation of Scottish Criminals to America during the Eighteenth CenturyThe Journal of British Studies, 1985
- The Waltham Black Act and JacobitismThe Journal of British Studies, 1985
- The Recruitment of Criminals into the British Army, 1775–81Historical Research, 1985
- Social Control and the StateThe American Historical Review, 1984
- THE MYTH OF A BRITISH INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTIONHistory, 1981
- DIVINE PHILANTHROPY: JOHN HOWARD RECONSIDEREDHistory, 1977
- THE PATTERN OF CRIME IN ENGLAND 1660–1800Past & Present, 1974
- THE MORAL ECONOMY OF THE ENGLISH CROWD IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURYPast & Present, 1971