----- 正义的伸张:法国大规模死刑的时代
Introduction: Reading and Writing a History of Punishment PART I: THE ROOTS OF MODERN PUNISHMENT IN PRE-MODERN EUROPE 1. The Fall and Rise of Rome: Compensation, Atonement, and Deterrence in the Early Middle Ages 2. Criminal Intent and Spectacular Punishment: The Infiltration of Roman Legal Theory and Practice into French Customary Law PART II: EXECUTIONERS AND THE RITUAL OF EXECUTION 3. Extraordinary Beings: The Life and Work of Executioners 4. The Execution of Justice: The Ritual of Punishment in Medieval and Early Modern France PART III: SPECTATORS & SPECTACLE 5. From Ritual to Spectacle: The Rise of the Penal Voyeur in Early Modern France 6. Executions, Spectator Emotions, and the Naturalization of Sympathy 7. A Spectacular Crisis: Watching Executions in the Age of Sensibilite PART IV: A DEATH PENALTY FOR THE MODERN AGE 8. Theorizing a New Death Penalty: Penal Reform on the Eve of the Revolution 9. Legislating the New Death Penalty: The Simple Deprivation of Life 10. Executing the New Death Penalty: The Invisible Spectacle of the Guillotine Epilogue: The Play Over, The Actors (Slowly) Leave the Stage (1794-1939) Conclusion: Punishment Past and Present
{{comment.content}}