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The disciplinary function of early crime narratives is subverted by their status as commodities. To what extent do you agree with this statement?

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In early crime narratives a tension exists between the intended disciplinary function and the entertainment value demanded by their status as commodities. The Ordinary Accounts and the criminal broadsides, for example, acted as an indirect form of state-controlled surveillance. This ideological policing, however, is balanced against the commercial obligation to appeal to a wide readership. Indeed, the sensational nature of early crime narratives arguably undermines their disciplinary purpose of deterring crime.

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Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction

‘The disciplinary function of early crime narratives is subverted by their status as
commodities.’ To what extent do you agree with this statement?

In early crime narratives a tension exists between the intended disciplinary function and the

entertainment value demanded by their status as commodities. The Ordinary Accounts and the

criminal broadsides, for example, acted as an indirect form of state-controlled surveillance.

This ideological policing, however, is balanced against the commercial obligation to appeal to

a wide readership. Indeed, the sensational nature of early crime narratives arguably

undermines their disciplinary purpose of deterring crime.

In ‘The Ordinary’s Account of Mary Young’1, the warning that crimes are punished is

intended to operate as a deterrent for committing crime. In the absence of a state-funded

system of policing, the Ordinaries were paid to compose narratives with a monitoring

function. In the Account of Mary Young, the Ordinary begins on an overt warning note.

Although the female criminal was well educated and instructed in the ‘Principles of Religion’

(Account, p.122), circumstances led her into criminality, where she gained the reputation as

one of the ‘artfullest Pick-pockets in the World’ (Account, p.122). Mary Young is sentenced

to death for her crimes, but ‘repented of all her Sins’ (Account, p.123), and hoped that her

‘untimely Exit may be a Warning’ (Account, p.123) to others. Nevertheless, this warning note

is subverted by the subsequent sensational account of the ‘Adventures’ (Account, p.129) of

the criminal gang. The Accounts were cheaply produced in pamphlet form, were sold

primarily to make a profit, and appealed to a wide readership. In order to maximise sales,

therefore, they had to be entertaining. In the Account of Mary Young, crime is glamorised and

the female criminal becomes the heroine of her tale. For instance, she frequently adopts the

guise of a ‘big-belly’d woman’ (Account, p.128), and on one occasion assumes this disguise

to enter a respectable house and steal property, which she stores ‘on the Inside of her large

Hoop’ (Account, p.128). After the sensational exploits of the gang, the final words of the

, 2

narrator, which attempt to reassert the ideological message of the narrative, are significantly

subverted. It is therefore arguable that the disciplinary function of the Account is overturned,

with the narrative encouraging, rather than preventing, crime.

Similarly to the Accounts, the criminal broadsides were designed to have a

disciplinary effect upon the reader. The broadsides communicated a set of socially determined

behaviours and notions. This ideological policing functions overtly in ‘The Trial, Confession,

and Execution of Joseph Richards.’2 The broadside includes the common image of the

execution platform pictured between the Church of St. Sepulchre and the Newgate Prison.

Executions were overt reminders that crime could be controlled and contained, and as Heather

Worthington acknowledges, the ‘execution broadsides functioned as the signifiers of

sovereign power.’3 To augment this image, the trial and execution of Richards is textualized

so that the reader can internalise the ideological message. A social surveillance clearly

operates in the narrative, as Richards’ crime involves an implicit attack upon the social order.

As a servant, Richards ‘owed duty and reverence’ (JR) to his master. After being discharged

for ‘negligence’ (JR), however, he frequently ‘threatened vengeance’ (JR) on Walter

Horseman, and subsequently murdered him. An awareness of the ‘Divine Law’ (JR) operates

in the narrative, a law which decrees that those who ‘sheddeth man’s blood’ (JR), and

transgress social boundaries, are punished. Consequently, Richards is tried and sentenced to

execution, enforcing the message that criminal acts inevitably lead to punishment. In his final

moments, the criminal attempts to make restitution for his crime, he repents his sins, and

makes ‘fervent appeals to Heaven for mercy’ (JR). As Stephen Knight identifies, the Newgate

Calendars are ‘heavily laced with Christian sentiments’4 and show how the criminal ‘came to

confession and a devout end on the scaffold.’5 In the criminal broadsides, Christian

repentance similarly operates as a deterrent for committing crime, and in this early crime

narrative the disciplinary purpose is not subverted by its commercial status.
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