This book presents the stories of men and women charged with murder in nineteenth century Ireland. Some were found guilty and sentenced to death and others were sent to the Central Criminal Asylum for Ireland at Dundrum. For those considered to be 'insane' at the time of committing the crime, their fate was an indefinite committal to Dundrum. For those considered responsible for their actions, it meant the death sentence which, in the first half of the century, was often reduced to transportation and, in the second half of the century, to penal servitude within the prison system. Drawing on her specialist knowledge of mental health policy and law, and with unique access to convict records, Prior explores these crimes within the context of criminal justice policies in Ireland at this time. Her examination of previously unexamined records shows that court judgments were highly gendered. The death penalty remained a possibility for anyone found guilty of murder and while the execution of a woman was unusual, it did occur. However, with the opening of a criminal lunatic asylum in 1850, a new approach was possible. Men who killed women and women who killed children began to use the insanity defence very successfully. For some, this was a positive outcome, leading to a short period of detention in Dundrum, but for others it led to a lifetime in an asylum. For those found guilty of the crime, the most frequent outcome was a long stretch in prison. An interesting outcome for many of these convicts was official assistance in emigrating to the US at the end of their sentences - a theme explored in the final chapter. If you are interested in crime in Ireland, in the link between mental disorder and crime, or in the impact of gender on crime and its punishment, this book is for you.
Smith , J. Making the Peace in Ireland ( Edinburgh and London : Pearson Education Ltd , 2002 ) . Social Democratic and Labour Party , Agreed Statement from John Hume and Gerry Adams ( Belfast : SDLP , 25 Sept. 1993 ) .
Murphy , Ireland in the Twentieth Century , p . 107 . 58. Chubb , B. The Politics of the Irish Constitution ( Dublin : Institute of Public Administration , 1991 ) , p . 16 . 59. Lyons , F.S.L. Culture and Anarchy in Ireland 1890–1939 ...
Although the satirical and comic drive of McDonagh's revivalist modernist play seems – as might his A Skull in Connemara – to exist on the basis of racist stereotypes like the 'ugly pugnacious ape-like cartoon figures of individual ...
Thomas 71 Fitzserald, 32 Fitzgerald, 'Colonel, 60 Fulton, Robert 83 Gallagher, Lieutenant, 102 Gallagher, Rev. Dr., 122 Gallagher, R 145 Gillespie, Captain 160 Gorman, Major 160 Hand, Adj. General, 48 Hogan, .
“ Shellshock and the psychologist , in W. Bynum , R. Porter and M. Shepard ( eds ) , The Anatomy of Madness : Essays in the History of Psychiatry . Vol . II , Institutions and Society . London : Tavistock . Sukla , J. A. ( ed . ) ...
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