Criminal Children in Victorian England
Criminal Children in Victorian England | Livres anciens et modernes | Duckworth Jeannie
Criminal Children in Victorian England
Criminal Children in Victorian England | Livres anciens et modernes | Duckworth Jeannie
Mode de Paiement
- PayPal
- Carte bancaire
- Virement bancaire
- Pubblica amministrazione
- Carta del Docente
Détails
- Auteur
- Duckworth Jeannie
- Éditeurs
- Hambledon and London Bloomsbury 2002
- Description
- As New
- Description
- H
- Jaquette
- True
- Etat de conservation
- Comme neuf
- Reliure
- Couverture rigide
- Dédicacée
- False
- Premiére Edition
- False
Description
8vo, cloth in dj,.x + 258pp., b/w pls., notes, bibliog., index, 'A study of the reality of child crime in the 19th century industrial cities of Britain and the reaction of the authorities to it'. Charles Dickens' "Oliver Twist", with Fagin, Sykes, the Artful Dodger and children trained as pickpockets and sent out as burglars' accomplices, provides an unforgettable fictional image of the Victorian underworld. "Fagin's Children" is an account of the reality of child crime in 19th-century England and the reaction of the authorities to it. It reveals the poverty and misery of many children's lives in the growing industrial cities of Britain and explores the changing attitudes of the authorities towards the problem. Inevitably most is known about children who were arrested. While few children were hanged after 1800, their treatment ranged from whipping to imprisonment, sometimes in the hulks, and transportation. Increasingly, elements of training and reclamation came into a system principally aimed at punishment. The book has been read, but is in excellent, as new condition. Pages are intact and not marred by notes or highlighting. The spine remains undamaged.