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Crime and Punishment
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The Crime and Punishment forum is a lively group of people who have serious opinions about some of the worst crimes, horrific criminals and crazy cases around. If you want the latest scoop on current crimes or like to voice your super sleuth opinions, the forum wants you!
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Crime and Punishment Beginning with the positives, Crime and Punishment has a fairly powerful cast with the exception of Patrick Dempsey. Julie Delpy plays an excellent Sonia, and Ben Kingsley could not have done a better Porfiry. The cast were great for their parts, unfortunately the actual movie wasn't too great in terms of quality film-making.
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Crime and Punishment: Inside Views, 1st ed. Crime and Punishment: Inside Views is useful as a supplement for courses in criminal justice, corrections, and criminology. It illuminates a wide array of individuals, settings, and issues, offering a stimulating introduction to the study of crime and punishment. These writings will sharpen student's critical thinking skills as they compare and judge these offenders' own words against the context of their textbooks. Editors Johnson and Toch's insightful introductions and commentaries at the beginning of each section and each essay serve as a useful "road map," framing the various writings and putting them into perspective.
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More recently, the growth of feminism and the interest in the role of gender in history has fostered research into violence and violent crime. While a decline in homicidal violence seems substantiated by the admittedly difficult evidence, the extent and pattern of interpersonal violence is less clear. Most men in the Middle Ages carried knives, and so too did many working-class men in the 19th century; a knife was simply a tool for many working men on the land, in towns, or at sea. Serious brawls in taverns could, in consequence, see knives drawn and serious injuries inflicted. Chastising wives, children, and servants for errors and bad behaviour was commonly seen as the duty of the head of a household in the medieval and early modern period. But a new sensibility in the 18th century began to condemn such chastisement, and increasingly cases could be brought before the courts as assaults.
It was recently discovered that Fyodor Dostoevsky plagiarized Crime and Punishment from Comrade Stalin 's book Crimethink and Joycamps, and filled it with crimethink, subliminal anti-prole messages, and capitalist propaganda. Dostoevsky was declared an evil capitalist saboteur in league with Goldstein Trotsky who was attempting to vandalize true literature. Thus, Comrade Stalin bravely saved the proles from the grasp of another evil traitor. To commemorate his victory, he was awarded the rank of Greatest Author Ever by himself. Comrade Stalin's great book was provided to everyone so that they could admire his genius. It, like all of Stalin's books, is the greatest piece of people literature ever written and won the Stalin Prize.
The sixteenth century ... witnessed the birth of a fascination with the existence of a criminal "underworld," a topic that has also enthralled some historians of the poor and of crime. Some records of police interrogations of beggars from the period have been found, most notably for sixteenth-century Rome. In them, elaborate structures of this underworld of criminal beggars were outlined. By the seventeenth century, particularly in Spain, popular literary motifs of shady characters inhabiting this underworld became widespread. Police interrogations of frightened poor people were likely to produce confirmations of what the interrogators expected to hear. This is just as true of the images of the elaborately imagined structure of the under-world of beggars, where each type of begging scam was taught and practiced by members of something like craft guilds, who then federated together, as it is of the testimonies of women tried as witches, who confessed to truly incredible practices and occurrences under pressure.
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