39 research outputs found

    Criminal trial procedure in eighteenth century England: The impact of lawyers.

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    © 2005 Taylor & Francis Ltd.David Lemming

    Mediatization of Emotion on Social Media: Forms and Norms in Digital Mourning Practices

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    This article provides the theoretical background for this Special Issue which explores the mediatization of emotion on social media as attested in different digital mourning practices. The overview discusses the affective and emotional turn alongside the mediatic turn in relation to key trends and foci in the study of affect/emotion. Our discussion points to a shift in conceptualizations of affect/emotion from mediated to mediatized practice, embedded in other social practices and subject to media and social media logics, affordances, and frames, which are worthy of empirical investigation. The article also presents key insights offered in the four articles of this Special Issue and foregrounds current and future directions in the study of mediatization, emotional sharing, and digital mourning practices

    Political trials and the suppression of popular radicalism in England, 1799-1820

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    This chapter examines the decision-making process between the Home Office and the government’s law officers in prosecuting individuals for sedition and treason in the period 1799–1820. The term state trial suggests a more centralised and government-led repression of popular radicalism than the process was in practice. Provincial reformers also faced the complex layers of their local justice system, which was more loyalist, committed to stamping out political radicalism. The trial of the “Thirty Eight” Manchester radicals in June 1812 demonstrates the mutable definitions of treason, sedition and processes of justice in the theatre of the court.Peer reviewe

    Law and government in England during the long eighteenth century: from consent to command

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    David Lemming

    Emotions, power and popular opinion about the administration justice: the english experience, from Coke’s ‘Artificial Reason’ to the sensibility of ‘True Crime Stories’

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    Tis article discusses emotions and power in the administration and representation of criminal justice in early modern England. In the early seventeenth century, professional lawyers insisted that only they were competent to understand the ‘arti cial reason’ of the common law; and lay opinion was associated with unreliable emotional engagement with the protagonists in trials. ‘Popular jurisprudence’ received renewed impetus from the post-Reformation emphasis on conscience and divine providence, however, and this kind of common sense interpretation often featured in popular accounts of law proceedings. Moreover, the ‘low law’ administered at grass roots level by JPs was less professionalised because most magistrates were not lawyers. The development of popular and emotional jurisprudence is demonstrated in the eighteenth century by analysis of judges’ charges, popular novels, and the reportage of ‘true crime’. Ultimately, and despite further ‘lawyerisation’ of trials, the article argues that the rise of the novel and increased press reporting of criminal justice generated more vicarious engagement with the administration of justice. And this was emotional engagement: eighteenth-century popular jurisprudence represented justice as variously awesome, theatrical, and unreasonably oppressive.David Lemming

    Rooke, Sir Giles (1743–1808), judge

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    David Lemmingshttp://www.oxforddnb.com/index/101024060

    Macdonald, Sir Archibald, first baronet (1747–1826), judge and politician

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    David Lemmingshttp://www.oxforddnb.com/index/101017429

    Wilson, Sir John (1741–1793), judge

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    David Lemmingshttp://www.oxforddnb.com/index/101029670

    Burnet, Sir Thomas (1694–1753), judge

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    David Lemming
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