Article ID: CBB001320015

The Rules of the Game: Forensic Medicine and the Language of Science in the Structuring of Modern Ritual Murder Trials (2012)

unapi

When ritual murder trials reappeared in central Europe in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, they could not be articulated in pre-Reformation language and symbols. Prosecutors, magistrates, trial judges, and police investigators shared an implicit understanding that a new universe of knowledge was in place in which academic experts and practitioners of science defined the boundaries---linguistic and conceptual---of plausible argument and were to be accorded deference. This does not mean that popular beliefs and understandings of Jewish ritual murder suddenly ceased to be disseminated or no longer influenced courtroom proceedings, or that zealous investigators and prosecutors did not pursue their cases armed with a priori assumptions about likely perpetrators and their motives. But cultural material, psychological predispositions, and even narrative accounts built upon eyewitness testimony could never suffice to move either the state to indict or a jury, or a panel of judges, to convict. Whatever nonrational thinking or prejudices may have accompanied it, the modern ritual murder trial was structured by powerful, if implicit, rules of expression and authority: it could only be articulated through the epistemological categories and idioms of a culture that understood itself to be both rational and scientific. What commands our attention, then, in the Tiszaeszlár, Xanten, and other modern ritual murder trials are the processes whereby ritual murder discourse bent---as it were---to the discipline of modernity, as exemplified by the structures and rules of legal procedure, parliamentary politics, mass-circulation journalism, criminology, medicine, and forensic science.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001320015/

Similar Citations

Book Alison Adam; (2016)
A History of Forensic Science: British Beginnings in the Twentieth Century (/isis/citation/CBB610315011/)

Article Mülberger, Annette; (2009)
Teaching Psychology to Jurists: Initiatives and Reactions Prior to World War I (/isis/citation/CBB000931968/)

Book Saumitra Basu; (2021)
The History of Forensic Science in India (/isis/citation/CBB589250648/)

Article Karallus, Christine; (2005)
Zwischen Kriminalistik und Justiz. Zur Konjunktur der Fotografie als Evindenzstrategie (/isis/citation/CBB000670819/)

Article Francesco Ventura; Rosagemma Ciliberti; (2019)
Mummified Remains in the Field of Forensics. The Comparison of a 19th Century Case Report with Current Cases (/isis/citation/CBB926134651/)

Book Starr, Douglas P.; (2010)
The Killer of Little Shepherds: A True Crime Story and the Birth of Forensic Science (/isis/citation/CBB001033742/)

Book Essig, Mark Regan; (2003)
Edison and the Electric Chair: A Story of Light and Death (/isis/citation/CBB000450004/)

Article Jermyn, Deborah; (2013)
Labs and Slabs: Television Crime Drama and the Quest for Forensic Realism (/isis/citation/CBB001213342/)

Article Aronson, Jay D.; (2005)
DNA Fingerprinting on Trial: The Dramatic Early History of a New Forensic Technique (/isis/citation/CBB000630821/)

Article Prainsack, Barbara; Kitzberger, Martin; (2009)
DNA Behind Bars: Other Ways of Knowing Forensic DNA Technologies (/isis/citation/CBB000953532/)

Book Sara M. Butler; (2015)
Forensic Medicine and Death Investigation in Medieval England (/isis/citation/CBB292678695/)

Article M'charek, Amade; Hagendijk, Rob; Vries, Wiebe de; (2013)
Equal before the Law: On the Machinery of Sameness in Forensic DNA Practice (/isis/citation/CBB001320664/)

Article Mazevet, Michel; Stagnara, Denise; Fischer, Louis-Paul; (2007)
Le Dr. Edmond Locard (1877--1966), le Sherlock Holmes lyonnais (/isis/citation/CBB000931843/)

Book Becker, Peter; Wetzell, Richard F.; (2006)
Criminals and Their Scientists: The History of Criminology in International Perspective (/isis/citation/CBB000772059/)

Thesis Jentzen, Jeffrey M.; (2007)
Death Investigation in America: Coroners, Medical Examiners, and the Pursuitof Medical Certainty (/isis/citation/CBB001560986/)

Authors & Contributors
Saumitra Basu
Ciliberti, Rosagemma
Ventura, Francesco
Duvall, Nicholas
Carnevale, Diego
Butler, Sara M.
Journals
Medicina Historica
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Social Studies of Science
Social History of Medicine
Science, Technology and Human Values
Representations
Publishers
Routledge
University of Wisconsin at Madison
Walker
Brill
Alfred A. Knopf
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Criminology
Forensic sciences
Science and law
Criminal law
Forensic medicine
Police; criminal justice departments
People
John Donald Merrett
Edison, Thomas Alva
Marbe, Karl
Lipmann, Otto
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century, late
20th century
18th century
Medieval
Places
United States
France
Austria
Lyon (France)
England
Naples (Italy)
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment