Crippen
Title Details

262 Pages

23.4 x 15.6 cm

20 b/w illus.

Imprint: Boydell Press

Crippen

A Crime Sensation in Memory and Modernity

by Roger Dalrymple

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Author
  • Reviews
How did the case of the 'mild mannered murderer', Hawley Harvey Crippen, come to have such an enduring cultural resonance?

Almost as notorious as Jack the Ripper, US citizen and homeopath Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen was forty-eight years old when he was hanged in London in November 1910 for the murder and mutilation of his wife. When Cora Crippen vanished in February 1910, he claimed that she had returned to the United States. Yet the discovery of a dismembered body, buried beneath the cola cellar of their house, and Crippen's attempt to flee to Canada with his cross-dressed mistress exposed and convicted him. The case aroused enormous public interest at the time, and it has remained in the popular imagination ever since, memorialised in crime history, fiction, film and even musical theatre. As late as 2007, some American academics were claiming that the dead body was not Cora's and that Crippen was in fact innocent.
This book aims to account for the endurance of the Dr Crippen murder case in the cultural imagination. Highlighting the case's disruptive blending of cultural traditions, it discusses historical precedents, analyses diverse literary traditions, looks at broadside balladry and music-hall repertoire and addresses queer theory discourses. The book shows how the case, part throwback to earlier crime sensations and part presage of a new understanding of criminality, represents a watershed in the representation of criminality and played a distinctive role in the development of crime fiction.
Accounting for Crippen
The Backdrop
The Road to Hilldrop Crescent
'Only a Little Scandal': An Outline of the Crippen Case
The Making of Classic Crippen
Crippen Rewritten
Goodbye Hilldrop Crescent

Roger Dalrymple is Deputy Director and Professor in the Department for Continuing Education at the University of Oxford

"A welcome volume...an essential addition to your collection." RIPPEROLOGIST
"Dalrymple offers a highly readable account . . . of the case and its social and cultural ramifications, drawing on a rich set of contexts in Edwardian society. He eloquently sets out the telling-and at times dubious-personal contexts of Crippen's own life, including the never fully explored death of his first wife, demonstrating how these in themselves open up "spaces" for speculation." Studies in Crime Writing
"Roger Dalrymple's text is not only a case-study of this gruesome crime but, more importantly, an exploration of how the Crippen story was rooted in fictional, criminological and media tropes from its very beginnings. . . . While to attempt to quantify the significance of murderers is a macabre, and perhaps impossible task, Crippen's lasting legacy proves his historical relevance." English Historical Review

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9781783275083

May 2020

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9781787446779

May 2020

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Title Details

262 Pages

2.34 x 1.56 cm

20 b/w illus.

Imprint: Boydell Press