9781789148541
9781789148947
A new account of urban Victorian life told through the dubious day-to-day of London’s police courts.
Nether World presents a rich, often humorous glimpse into everyday life in Victorian London through a revealing account of nineteenth-century police courts. People of all classes brought complaints to this court about those who had hurt, abused, or stolen from them—drunks, pickpockets, wife-beaters, and fraudsters—who were each in their turn judged by magistrates wielding broad summary powers. Delving into underexamined court records and the pages of a fast-developing newspaper industry, Drew D. Gray offers a fresh description of a vibrant, ever-changing metropolis and considers ongoing issues such as poverty, homelessness, violence, substance abuse, prostitution, and—of course—crime.
Nether World presents a rich, often humorous glimpse into everyday life in Victorian London through a revealing account of nineteenth-century police courts. People of all classes brought complaints to this court about those who had hurt, abused, or stolen from them—drunks, pickpockets, wife-beaters, and fraudsters—who were each in their turn judged by magistrates wielding broad summary powers. Delving into underexamined court records and the pages of a fast-developing newspaper industry, Drew D. Gray offers a fresh description of a vibrant, ever-changing metropolis and considers ongoing issues such as poverty, homelessness, violence, substance abuse, prostitution, and—of course—crime.
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Table of Contents
Introduction and Themes
1 The Police, Drink and the Working Classes
2 Regulating the Capital’s Streets and Businesses
3 Thieves and Swindlers
4 Violence and Homicide
5 Juveniles in the Police Courts
6 Prostitution and the Police Courts
7 Poverty and Homelessness
8 Politics, Riot and Trade Unionism
Conclusion: The People’s Courts?
References
Acknowledgements
Photo Acknowledgements
Index
1 The Police, Drink and the Working Classes
2 Regulating the Capital’s Streets and Businesses
3 Thieves and Swindlers
4 Violence and Homicide
5 Juveniles in the Police Courts
6 Prostitution and the Police Courts
7 Poverty and Homelessness
8 Politics, Riot and Trade Unionism
Conclusion: The People’s Courts?
References
Acknowledgements
Photo Acknowledgements
Index
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