Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany

With the growth of printing in early modern Germany, crime quickly became a subject of wide public discourse. Sensational crime reports, often featuring multiple murders within families, proliferated as authors probed horrific events for religious meaning. Coinciding with heightened witch panics and economic crisis, the spike in crime fears revealed a continuum between fears of the occult and more mundane dangers.

In Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany, Joy Wiltenburg explores the beginnings of crime sensationalism from the early sixteenth century into the seventeenth century and beyond. Comparing the depictions of crime in popular publications with those in archival records, legal discourse, and imaginative literature, Wiltenburg highlights key social anxieties and analyzes how crime texts worked to shape public perceptions and mentalities. Reports regularly featured familial destruction, flawed economic relations, and the apocalyptic thinking of Protestant clergy. Wiltenburg examines how such literature expressed and shaped cultural attitudes while at the same time reinforcing governmental authority. She also shows how the emotional inflections of crime stories influenced the growth of early modern public discourse, so often conceived in terms of rational exchange of ideas.

1109713650
Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany

With the growth of printing in early modern Germany, crime quickly became a subject of wide public discourse. Sensational crime reports, often featuring multiple murders within families, proliferated as authors probed horrific events for religious meaning. Coinciding with heightened witch panics and economic crisis, the spike in crime fears revealed a continuum between fears of the occult and more mundane dangers.

In Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany, Joy Wiltenburg explores the beginnings of crime sensationalism from the early sixteenth century into the seventeenth century and beyond. Comparing the depictions of crime in popular publications with those in archival records, legal discourse, and imaginative literature, Wiltenburg highlights key social anxieties and analyzes how crime texts worked to shape public perceptions and mentalities. Reports regularly featured familial destruction, flawed economic relations, and the apocalyptic thinking of Protestant clergy. Wiltenburg examines how such literature expressed and shaped cultural attitudes while at the same time reinforcing governmental authority. She also shows how the emotional inflections of crime stories influenced the growth of early modern public discourse, so often conceived in terms of rational exchange of ideas.

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Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany

Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany

by Joy Wiltenburg
Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany

Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany

by Joy Wiltenburg

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Overview

With the growth of printing in early modern Germany, crime quickly became a subject of wide public discourse. Sensational crime reports, often featuring multiple murders within families, proliferated as authors probed horrific events for religious meaning. Coinciding with heightened witch panics and economic crisis, the spike in crime fears revealed a continuum between fears of the occult and more mundane dangers.

In Crime and Culture in Early Modern Germany, Joy Wiltenburg explores the beginnings of crime sensationalism from the early sixteenth century into the seventeenth century and beyond. Comparing the depictions of crime in popular publications with those in archival records, legal discourse, and imaginative literature, Wiltenburg highlights key social anxieties and analyzes how crime texts worked to shape public perceptions and mentalities. Reports regularly featured familial destruction, flawed economic relations, and the apocalyptic thinking of Protestant clergy. Wiltenburg examines how such literature expressed and shaped cultural attitudes while at the same time reinforcing governmental authority. She also shows how the emotional inflections of crime stories influenced the growth of early modern public discourse, so often conceived in terms of rational exchange of ideas.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813933030
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 01/07/2013
Series: Studies in Early Modern German History
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
Sales rank: 317,722
File size: 3 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Joy Wiltenburg, Professor of History at Rowan University, is the author of Women in Early Modern Germany: An Anthology of Popular Texts and Disorderly Women and Female Power in the Street Literature of Early Modern England and Germany (Virginia).

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations vi

Acknowledgments vii

Introduction 1

1 Crime and Society: Patterns in Deed and Word 21

2 Law and the Rational Hero 42

3 Crime into Text 65

4 Crime and Christianity 88

5 Family Murders 111

6 Training the Imagination: Crime and the Inner Life 136

7 Staging the Lamentable Theater: Crime, Reason, and Emotion in the Seventeenth Century 163

Conclusion 185

Notes 193

Bibliography 225

Index 261

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