PART Ⅰ: CRIME AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF HISTORICAL NARRATIVE 3
1 Does the Representation Fit the Crime? Some Thoughts on Writing Crime History as Cultural Text&Amy Gilman Srebnick 3
PART Ⅱ: DISCOURSE AND NARRATIVE IN THE HISTORY OF CRIMINOLOGY 23
2 Criminological Language and Prose from the Late Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Centuries&Peter Becker 23
3 Science and Narrative in Italian Criminology, 1880-1920&Mary Gibson 37
4 'Robert Heindl's Berufsverbrecber2: Police Perceptions of Crime and Criminals and Structures of Crime Control in Germany during the First Half of the Twentieth Century&Herbert Reinke 49
PART Ⅲ:THE RECONSTRUCTION OF EVENTS IN POLICE AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE HISTORY 63
5 Narratives of Crime, Historical Interpretation and the Course of Human Events: The Becker Case and American Progressivism&Allen Steinberg 63
6 Sergeant Goddard:The Story of a Rotten Apple, or a Diseased Orchard?&Clive Emsley 85
7 Competing Memories: Resistance, Collaboration and the Purge of the French Pofice after World War Ⅱ&Jean-Marc Berliere 105
8 Facts and Fiction in Police Illegalisms: The Case of Controlled Deliveries of Drugs in France in the Early 1990s&Rend Levy 121
PART Ⅳ: REPRESENTATIONS OF CRIMES AND CRIMINALS 141
9 Private Crimes and Public Executions: Discourses on Guilt in the Arrets Criminels of the Eighteenth-Century Parliament of Paris&Pascal Bastien 141
10 Rebels or Bandits? The Representations of the 'Peasants' War' in Belgian Departments under French Rule (1798)&Xavier Rousseaux 163
11 The Multiple Lives of the Hungarian Highwayman Monika Matay and Gyargy Csepeli 183
12 From Old Cap Collier to Nick Carter; Or, Images of Crime and Criminal Justice in American Dime Novel Detective Stories, 1880-1920&Wilbur R. Miller 199
Index 211