The Age of Reform – the hundred years from 1820 to 1920 - has become synonymous with innovation and change but this period was also in many ways a deeply conservative and cautious one. With reform came reaction and revolution and this was as true of the law as it was of literature, art and technology. The age of Great Exhibitions and Great Reform Acts was also the age of newly systemized police forces, courts and prisons. A Cultural History of Law in the Age of Reform presents an overview of the period with a focus on human stories located in the crush between legal formality and social reform: the newly uniformed police, criminal mugshots, judge and jury, the shame of child labor, and the need for neighborliness in the crowded urban and increasingly industrial landscapes of Europe and the United States.
Drawing upon a wealth of visual and textual sources, A Cultural History of Law in the Age of Reform presents essays that examine key cultural case studies of the period on the themes of justice, constitution, codes, agreements, arguments, property and possession, wrongs, and the legal profession.
Author(s): Ian Ward (ed.)
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Year: 2019
Cover
Contents
List of Figures
Notes on Contributors
Series Preface
Introduction
1 Justice: Visual Representations of the Subjects of the Law
2 Constitution: Utopia, Limited or a Limited Utopia?
3 Codes: Police Uniform and the Image of Law Enforcement
4 Agreements: The Social Contract and Child Labor in Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s “The Cry of the Children”
5 Arguments: Jury Lawfinding and Constitutional Review in 1840s New Hampshire
6 Property and Possession: New Languages of Property
7 Wrongs: Negligence, Neighborliness, and the Duty of Care in Nineteenth-century Narrative
8 The Legal Profession: Dickens, Daumier, and The Man of Law
Notes
Bibliography
Index