Written in Blood : Fatal Attraction in Enlightenment Amsterdam / Pieter Spierenburg.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: History of crime and criminal justice series | Book collections on Project MUSEPublisher: Columbus : Ohio State University Press, 2004Manufacturer: Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2015Copyright date: ©2004Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (230 pages): illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780814273395
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Online resources:
Contents:
A big city in cultural flux: eighteenth-century Amsterdam -- No one suspected he would end as a murderer -- A new woman -- How to dump a body when there are no cars? -- Nathaniel's ascension -- An unsuccessful career -- An infamous infatuation -- Honor, shame, and notoriety -- Van Gogh's last blood.
Summary: "Pieter Spierenburg narrates two sensational murder cases among intimates in eighteenth-century Amsterdam. The cases recounted here both resulted from fatal attraction. They represented the darker side of the eighteenth-century revolution in love. This period witnessed great cultural changes affecting personal relationships and emotions. The new ideal of love demanded that couples spend much of their time together and explore each other's feelings. But this new ideal was meant for married and engaged couples only; for others it meant disaster. Love gone wrong was the theme of the sentimental novels of the age, but it also happened to real people, with fatal consequences." "Written in Blood traces the life and ultimate fate of Nathaniel Donker, who, together with the help of his mistress, brutally murders and dismembers his wife. The second tale focuses on J.B.F. van Gogh, who falls in love with a prostitute; she later rejects him and, when a letter written with his own blood fails to change her mind, he stabs her to death in a fit of passionate rage." "In Written in Blood, the reader gets two stories for the price of one. And, whereas earlier microhistories have been situated in a village or a small town, the scene here is Amsterdam and its canals. Spierenburg reveals in detail what concepts like honor and gender roles came down to in individual lives. He also shows that these murders produced a strange mixture of modern romantic feelings and traditional notions of honor and shame."--Jacket
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A big city in cultural flux: eighteenth-century Amsterdam -- No one suspected he would end as a murderer -- A new woman -- How to dump a body when there are no cars? -- Nathaniel's ascension -- An unsuccessful career -- An infamous infatuation -- Honor, shame, and notoriety -- Van Gogh's last blood.

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"Pieter Spierenburg narrates two sensational murder cases among intimates in eighteenth-century Amsterdam. The cases recounted here both resulted from fatal attraction. They represented the darker side of the eighteenth-century revolution in love. This period witnessed great cultural changes affecting personal relationships and emotions. The new ideal of love demanded that couples spend much of their time together and explore each other's feelings. But this new ideal was meant for married and engaged couples only; for others it meant disaster. Love gone wrong was the theme of the sentimental novels of the age, but it also happened to real people, with fatal consequences." "Written in Blood traces the life and ultimate fate of Nathaniel Donker, who, together with the help of his mistress, brutally murders and dismembers his wife. The second tale focuses on J.B.F. van Gogh, who falls in love with a prostitute; she later rejects him and, when a letter written with his own blood fails to change her mind, he stabs her to death in a fit of passionate rage." "In Written in Blood, the reader gets two stories for the price of one. And, whereas earlier microhistories have been situated in a village or a small town, the scene here is Amsterdam and its canals. Spierenburg reveals in detail what concepts like honor and gender roles came down to in individual lives. He also shows that these murders produced a strange mixture of modern romantic feelings and traditional notions of honor and shame."--Jacket

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