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9780198219682

Rituals of Retribution Capital Punishment in Germany, 1600-1987

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780198219682

  • ISBN10:

    0198219687

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1996-05-09
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

The state has no greater power over its own citizens than that of killing them. This book examines the use of that supreme sanction in Germany, from the seventeenth century to the present. Richard Evans analyses the system of 'traditional' capital punishments set out in German law, and the ritual practices and cultural readings associated with them by the time of the early modern period. He shows how this system was challenged by Enlightenment theories of punishment and broke down under the impact of secularization and social change in the first half of the nineteenth century. The abolition of the death penalty became a classic liberal case which triumphed, if only momentarily, in the 1848 Revolution. In Germany far more than anywhere else in Europe, capital punishment was identified with anti-liberal, authoritarian concepts of sovereignty. Its definitive reinstatement by Bismarck in the 1880s marked not only the defeat of liberalism but also coincided with the emergence of new, Social Darwinist attitudes towards criminality which gradually changed the terms of debate. The triumph of these attitudes under the Nazis laid the foundations for the massive expansion of capital punishment which took place during Hitler's 'Third Reich'. After the Second World War, the death penalty was abolished, largely as a result of a chance combination of circumstances, but continued to be used in the Stalinist system of justice in East Germany until its forced abandonment as a result of international pressure exerted in the regime in the 1970s and 1980s. This remarkable and disturbing book casts new light on the history of German attitudes to law, deviance, cruelty, suffering and death, illuminating many aspects of Germany's modern political development. Using sources ranging from folksongs and ballads to the newly released government papers from the former German Democratic Republic, Richard Evans scrutinizes the ideologies behind capital punishment and comments on interpretations of the history of punishment offered by writers such as Foucault and Elias. He has made a formidable contribution not only to scholarship on German history but also to the social theory of punishement, and to the current debate on the death penalty.

Author Biography

Richard J. Evans is Professor of History, and Vice-Master, at Birkbeck College, University of London.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Abbreviations
Introductionp. 1
Theatres of Crueltyp. 27
The Death Penalty in Early Modern Germanyp. 27
Crime and the Law around 1600p. 35
The Decline of Capital Punishmentp. 41
Honour and Dishonourp. 53
The German Executionerp. 56
Rites of Bloodp. 65
Pronouncing Sentencep. 65
The March to the Scaffoldp. 73
The Scene at the Ravenstonep. 77
Languages of the Dismembered Bodyp. 86
Reversing the Signsp. 99
A Rational Degree of Painp. 109
The Decline of Torturep. 109
Penal Reform in the Enlightenmentp. 121
Beccaria and the Abolition of the Death Penaltyp. 127
The Prussian General Law Code of 1794p. 133
The Legacy of the Guillotinep. 140
Farewell Songs and Moral Speechesp. 150
Execution Verses 1680-1760p. 150
Gender and the Representation of Punishmentp. 159
The Silence of the Malefactorp. 168
The Ambiguities of Folk-Songp. 173
Popular Culture and Capital Punishmentp. 181
The Wheel, the Sword, and the Axep. 193
An Execution in Berlinp. 193
'Coarseness and Immorality'p. 202
Cultural Change and the Reform of Executions 1800-1835p. 207
Reducing the Variety of Punishments 1794-1839p. 213
Paradoxes of Reformp. 225
From Reform to Revolutionp. 240
Reforming the Criminal Law 1813-1848p. 240
The Attack on the Death Penalty in the 1840sp. 248
Public Executions and Public Orderp. 257
The Debate in the Frankfurt Parliamentp. 266
Capital Punishment in the 1848 Revolutionp. 277
Restoration and Changep. 285
The Condemned and the Reprievedp. 285
Structures of Mercyp. 300
The Abolition of Public Executions 1851-1863p. 305
The Revival of Abolitionism in the 1860sp. 321
The Debates in the North German Reichstag 1870p. 329
The People's Executionersp. 351
Capital Punishment and the Foundation of the German Empirep. 351
The Re-establishment of Capital Punishment in the 1880sp. 361
The Explosive Substances Law of 1884p. 368
The Professionalization of the German Executionerp. 372
'Licensed Pieceworkers'p. 384
The Culture of Embarrassmentp. 396
The Issue of Entry Cardsp. 396
The Printed Public Sphere 1880-1914p. 402
The Search for Secrecyp. 413
The Growth of Squeamishnessp. 421
New Justifications for the Death Penaltyp. 428
The Revival of Abolitionismp. 446
Liberals, Pacifists, and Capital Punishment 1895-1912p. 446
The Social Democrats and the Death Penaltyp. 455
Reforming the Criminal Code 1906-1914p. 462
The Sternickel Trialp. 470
Wilhelmine Apocalypsep. 477
A New Beginning?p. 487
Capital Punishment in the November Revolutionp. 487
The Weimar National Assemblyp. 491
The Social Democrats and the Death Penalty 1919-1927p. 499
Capital Punishment and Party Politicsp. 507
The Restoration of Normalityp. 518
'The Death Penalty Practicality Abolished!'p. 526
Criminal Biology and Serial Murderp. 526
Executions and the Public Sphere 1922-1928p. 536
The Crisis of the German Executionerp. 542
The Jakubowski Case 1923-1928p. 548
The Suspension of Executions 1928-1929p. 561
'Murderers Amongst Us'p. 572
The Failure of Criminal Law Reform 1929-1930p. 572
The End of the Jakubowski Case 1928-1932p. 575
An Execution in Wurttembergp. 587
The 'Dusseldorf Vampire'p. 591
The Restoration of Capital Punishment 1931-1932p. 605
'Healthy Popular Feelingp. 613
Uncertainty on Death Row 1932-1933p. 613
The Reichstag Fire and the Lex van der Lubbep. 618
National Socialism and Capital Punishmentp. 624
Legal Reform and the Death Penalty 1933-1939p. 631
The Expansion of Capital Punishment 1933-1939p. 641
The Third Reich and its Executionersp. 651
Changing the method of Execution 1933-1936p. 651
Capital Punishment and the Divided Public Spherep. 659
The Volunteer Executionersp. 665
Apogee of a Professionp. 669
'Antisocial Elements'p. 681
From Execution to Exterminationp. 689
Capital Punishment and the Judiciary 1939-1942p. 689
'Cleansing the Raical Body'p. 696
Towards Assembly-Line Executionp. 710
Executioners in Wartimep. 720
Capital Punishment and Racial Extermination 1939-1945p. 726
Legacies of Terrorp. 741
Capital Punishment and the Occupying Powers 1945-1951p. 741
German Justice and the Restoration of the Death Penaltyp. 756
The End of the Death Penalty in the Westp. 775
The Campaign to Reintroduce Capital Punishmentp. 789
Article 102 and the Legacy of the Third Reichp. 797
'In the Interests of Humanity'p. 805
Capital Punishment in the Soviet Zone 1945-1950p. 805
The Stalinization of East German Justice 1949-1953p. 815
Espionage, Sabotage, 'Diversion': The Aftermath of 17 Junep. 834
Destalinization and its Limits 1956-1961p. 846
The End of the Death Penalty in the Eastp. 855
Conclusionp. 873
Statistical Appendixp. 913
Bibliographyp. 939
Indexp. 993
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

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