The History of Suicide in England, 1650–1850, Part I
Pickering & Chatto (Publishers) Ltd
978-1-85196-980-7 (ISBN)
Paul S Seaver
Part I: 1650-1750 Volume 1: 1650-1673 General Introduction - Mark Robson Introduction to Volumes 1 and 2 Suicide and the Broadside Ballad: Anon., The Faithful Lovers Downfal: The Death of Fair Phillis who Killed Her Self for Loss of her Philander (c.1644-80); Anon., The Lamenting Ladies Last Farewell to the World (c.1650-80); Anon., The Divils Cruelty to Mankind (1662); Anon., A Godly Warning for All Maidens by the Example of Gods Judgements Shewed upon One Jermans Wife of Clifton in the County of Nottingham, Who Lying in Child-Bed, Was Born Away and Never Heard of After (c.1670); Anon., The Dying Damsels Doleful Destiny: Or, True love Requited with Evil (c.1671-1704); Anon., Loves Lamentable Tragedy (c.1671-1704); Anon., The London Damsels fate by Unjust Tyrany: Or, The Rash Lover (c.1672-96); Anon., A Tragical Story of Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor (1677); Anon., Loves Downfal (c.1678-80); Anon., The Unnatural Mother: Being a True Relation of One Jane Lawson, Once Living at East-Barnet, in Middlesex; Who Quarreling with Her Husband, Urged Him to Strike Her, and Thereupon the Same Night, Being the First of Sept. 1680, Drowned Her Self and Two Poor Babies in a Well (c.1680-1); Anon., The Damosels Tragedy: Or, True love in Distress (c.1682-1703); Anon., The Fair Maid of Dunsmore's Lamentation (c.1683); Anon., Whitney's Dying Letter to His Mistress That Betray'd Him: With Her Answer (1692). Thomas Beard, 'Of Such as Have Murdered Themselves' (1631); William Denny, Pelecanicidium, or The Christian Advisor against Self-Murder (1653; Anon., A Sad Caveat to all Quakers. Not to Boast Any More That They Have God Almighty by the Hand, When They Have the Devil by the Toe (1657); [Owen Stockton], Counsel to the Afflicted, Or Instruction and Consolation for Such as Have Suffered Loss by Fire (1667); [J Shafte], The Great Law of Nature, or Self-Preservation Examined, Asserted, and Vindicated from Mr Hobbes His Abuses (1673); Anon., A True Account of the Late, Most Doleful, and Lamentable Tragedy of Old Maddam Gwinn, Mother to Maddam Elenor Gwinn; Who Was Unfortunately Drowned, in a Fish-Pond, at Her Own Mansion-House, Near the Neat-Houses (1679); John Collinges, Defensative Armour against Four of Sathan's Most Fiery Darts: Viz. Temptations to Atheistical and Blasphemous Impressions and Thoughts, Self-Murther, Despair, and Presumption (1680) Volume 2: 1674-1699 Short Texts: Anthony Wildgoose, The Young-Mans Second Warning-Peece (1643); Anon., The Troubled-Spirited Mans Departing (1653); Anon., Sad and Deplorable News from Fleet-Street (1674); Anon., Sad and Lamentable News from Rumford (1674); Anon., The Sad Effects of Cruelty Detected (1675); Anon., Strange and Lamentable News from Dullidg-Wells (1678); Anon., The Sad and Dreadful Relation of a Bloody and Cruel Murther (1684); Anon., An Account of the Most Strange and Barbarous Action (1685); Anon., A Sad and Dreadful account of the Self-Murther of Robert Long, Alias Baker (1685); Anon., Sad and Dreadful News from Dukes-Place Near Aldgate (1686); Anon., A Full and True Relation of the Murther of Doctor Urthwait (1689); Anon., A Sad and Lamentable Account of the Strange and Unhappy Misfortune of Mr John Temple (1689). Thomas Philpot, Self-Homicide-Murther (1674) The Earl of Essex's Suicide: Anon., An Account of How the Earl of Essex Killed Himself in the Tower of London (1683); Embroyan-fancy of anti-Jack Presbyter, A New Poem on the Dreadful Death of the Earl of Essex, Who Cut His Own Throat in the Tower (1683); Anon., A True Narrative of the Bloody Murther of the Earl of Essex, Upon Himself, Being Now a Prisoner in the Tower (1683); Henry Danvers, Murder Will Out (1689); Robert Ferguson, An Enquiry into, and Detection of the Barbarous Murther of the Late Earl of Essex (1684); Laurence Braddon, Essex's Innocency And Honour Vindicated (1690); 'Notes on the Death of the Earl of Essex' (1683) John Child: John Child, A Second Argument, for a More Full and Firm Union amongst All Good Protestants (1684); Anon., Sad and Lamentable News from Brick-Lane in the Hamlet of Spittle Fields (1684); Thomas Plant and Benjamin Dennis (eds), The Mischief of Persecution Exemplified (1688). Charles Gildon, 'An Account of the Life and Death of the Author' (1695). Willis, The Occasional Paper: [Richard Willis], 'In a Letter to a Friend' (1697); [Richard Willis], 'Concerning Self-Murder' (1698). Nathaniel Whaley, 'Of Murther Particularly Duelling and Self-Murther' (1698); Anon., A Reply to the Hertford Letter (1699) Volume 3: 1700-1716 Introduction to Volumes 3 and 4 John Adams, An Essay Concerning Self-Murther (1700). Satires on Suicide: Anon., A Step to Oxford (1700); W Withers, Some Thoughts Concerning Suicide, or Self-Killing (1711). John Jeffery, Felo de Se: Or a Warning against the Most Horrid and Unnatural Sin of Self-Murder (1702); Anon., 'A Vindication of Self-Muder', Post Angel (1702); Daniel Defoe, Review of the Affairs of France (1704); J B, Apstophonia, or Self-Murther Arraigned and Condemned (1705); John Dunton, 'That the Self-Murder of the Pagans was Justifiable', Athenian Sport (1707); Thomas Knaggs, A Sermon against Self-Murder (1708); John Prince, Self-Murder Asserted to be a Very Heinous Crime; in Opposition to all Arguments Brought by the Deists, to the Contrary (1709); 'A Sin to Die for Love?', British Apollo (1709); John Edwards, from Theologica Reformata (1713); John Cockburn, A Discourse of Self-Murder (1716); William Fleetwood, 'Three Sermons upon the Case of Self-Murder', Relative Duties to Parents and Children, Husbands and Wives, Masters and Servants (1716); Sir George Mackenzie, 'Self-Murder', The Works (1716-22) Volume 4: 1717-1750 Newspapers: Reporting Suicide Religious and Moral Periodical Essays: Anon., 'Of Suicide' (1732); Anon., The Prompter (1736); James Mauclerc, 'Concerning Self-Murder' (1745); Anon., 'Letter to the British Gazette' (1728); Anon., Universal Spectator (1732). Diabolical Influence: Isaac Watts, Defense against the Temptation to Self-Murther (1726); Anon., A Discourse upon Self-Murder (1732). Commentaries on 'Lunacy' and the Law: Matthew Bacon, 'Felo de se' (1736-66); Philanthropus, 'To the Old Whig' (1737); Philadelphus, 'To the Author of Read's Journal' (1731); Ralph Freeman, 'The Merits of the Crafts-Men Consider'd' (1738); Ralph Freeman, The Daily Gazetteer (1739); Anon., Present State of the Republick of Letters (1728). Suicide and Free Thought: Anon., 'On Suicide' (1732); Anon., Weekly Miscellany (1737); Anon., The Christian Free-Thinker (1740); Simon Berington, A Dialogue between the Gallows and a Freethinker (1744); M Deslandes, 'If There Be Valour in Suicide?' (1745); Alberto Radicati, Count of Passerano, A Philosophical Dissertation upon Death (1732); Socrates, 'Remarks upon a Pamphlet Call'd A Philosophical Dissertation On Death, &c.' (1732). The Case of Richard and Bridget Smith: Anon., Gentleman's Magazine (1732); Anon., 'Domestick Occurrences in April 1732' (1732); Alexander Pope, One Thousand Seven Hundred and Thirty-Eight (1738). Cato: Anon., The Free-Thinker (1718); Philadelphus, 'To the Author of Read's Journal' (1731); John Henley, Cato Condemn'd (1730); John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, Cato's Letters (1733); Philalethes, Cato. Two Letters (1721); Anon., Universal Spectator (1734); Samuel Catherall, Cato Major (1725). Duelling, Suicide and the 'Code of Honour': Anon., 'Self-Murther the Effect of Cowardice and Atheism' (1728); James Foster, 'Of Duels and Self-Murder' (1744); Hercules Vinegar, pseud [Henry Fielding], and T U, The Champion; or, The Evening Advertiser (1741); Anon., Westminster Journal (1747); Anon., 'Suicide: or Self-Murder' (1726). Fanny Braddock and Gambling: Anon., London Evening Post (1731); Anon., 'Of the Unhappy Self-Murther of Mrs Fanny Braddock at Bath' (1731); [Lydia Granger], Modern Amours (1733); Anon., 'Mr Morgan' (1736). Women's Suicide: [Sarah Chapone], The Hardships of the English Laws in Relation to Wives (1735); Septimus and Henry [Baker], Universal Spectator (1730); [Eliza Haywood], Lady's Weekly Magazine (1747). Love Suicide and Literature: Richard Gwinnett, Pylades and Corinna (1732); Anon., The Fair Suicide (1733); Anon., The Oxfordshire Tragedy; or, The death of Four Lovers (c.1736-63); Eliza Haywood, The British Recluse (1721); Richard Savage, The Wanderer: A Vision (1729). The English Malady from Other Perspectives: Anon., 'Of Suicide or Self-Murder' (1732); William Lloyd, Letters from a Moor at London to His Friend in Tunis (1726); Anon., The German Spy (1740). Eustace Budgell, Liberty and Property (1732); Zachary Pearce, A Sermon on Self-Murder (1736), John Tillard, 'Whether the Heathens Encouraged, or Approved of Self-Murder?' (1742)
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 1.1.2012 |
---|---|
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 3039 g |
Themenwelt | Geschichte ► Allgemeine Geschichte ► Neuzeit (bis 1918) |
Geisteswissenschaften ► Geschichte ► Regional- / Ländergeschichte | |
Geschichte ► Teilgebiete der Geschichte ► Kulturgeschichte | |
ISBN-10 | 1-85196-980-2 / 1851969802 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-85196-980-7 / 9781851969807 |
Zustand | Neuware |
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
aus dem Bereich