Benjamin Rush and the Gothic Origins of American Criminology (2024)

Altschuler S., Bilodeau C., 2017, Ecce hom*o! The figure of Benjamin Rush, Early American Studies, 15, 2, 233-251.

Bell R., 2017, The moral thermometer: Rush, republicanism, and suicide, Early American Studies, 15, 2, 308-331.

Benson S., 2019, The Prison of Democracy: Race, Leavenworth, and the Culture of Law, Berkeley, University of California Press.

Bierne P., 1991, Inventing criminology: The “science of man” in Cesare Beccaria’s Dei Delitti E Delle Penne (1764), Criminology, 29, 4, 777-820.

Bierne P., 1993, Inventing Criminology: Essays on the Rise of hom*o Criminalis”, Albany, SUNY Press.

Blumenthal S., 2016, Law and the Modern Mind: Consciousness and Responsibility in American Legal Culture, Cambridge, Harvard University Press.

Botting F., 1996, Gothic, London, Routledge.

Brown C., 2008, Wieland: or, The Transformation, An American Tale, Auckland, The Floating Press.

Caldwell C., 1824, Elements of Phrenology, Lexington, Skillman.

Caldwell C., 1834, Address on the Vice of Gambling, Lexington, J. Clarke & Co.

Carlson E., Wollock J., Noel P. (Eds.), 1981, Benjamin Rush’s Lectures on the Mind, Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society.

Castiglia C., 1996, Bound and Determined: Captivity, Culture-Crossing, and White Womanhood from Mary Rowlandson to Patty Hearst, Chicago, University of Chicago Press.

Castle T., 1987, The female thermometer, Representations, 17, 1-27.

Castle T., 1995, The Female Thermometer: Eighteenth-Century Culture and the Invention of the Uncanny, Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Crow C., 2009, American Gothic, Cardiff, University of Wales Press.

Dannenbaum J., 1984, Drink and Disorder: Temperance Reform in Cincinnati from the Washingtonian Revival to the WCTU, Urbana, University of Illinois Press.

Davidson C., 1986, Revolution and the Word, Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Dayan C., 2014, With law at the edge of life, South Atlantic Quarterly, 113, 629-639.

D’Elia D., 1970, Benjamin Rush, David Hartley, and the revolutionary uses of psychology. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 114, 109-118.

DeLombard J., 2012, In the Shadow of the Gallows: Race, Crime, and American Civic Identity, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press.

Downes D., Rock P., 2011, Understanding Deviance: A Guide to the Sociology of Crime and Rule-Breaking (Sixth Edition), Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Dubber M., 1996, The pain of punishment, Buffalo Law Review, 44, 2, 545-611.

Dumm T., 1987, Democracy and Punishment: Disciplinary Origins of the United States, Madison, University of Wisconsin Press.

During D., 1988, The strange case of monomania: Patriarchy in literature, murder in Middlemarch, drowning in Daniel Deronda, Representations, 23, 86-104.

Fiedler L., 1997, Love and Death in the American Novel, Champaign, Dalkey Archive Press.

Fink A., 1938, Causes of Crime: Biological Theories in the United States, 1800-1915, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press.

Fitzgerald N., 1980, Wieland’s Crime: A Source and Analogue Study of the Foremost Novel of the Father of American Literature, Ph.D. Dissertation in American Civilization, Brown University, 1980.

Foucault M., 1977, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, New York, Pantheon Books.

Foucault M., 1978, About the concept of the “dangerous individual” in 19th-century legal psychiatry, International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 1, 1-18.

Frank J., 2009, Sympathy and separation: Benjamin Rush and the contagious public, Modern Intellectual History, 6, 27-57.

Goddu T., 2014, The African American slave narrative and the gothic, in Crow C. (Ed.), A Companion to American Gothic, Malden, Wiley-Blackwell, 69-83.

Gokcekus S., 2019, Elizabeth Hamilton’s Scottish associationism: Early nineteenth-century philosophy of mind, Journal of the American Philosophical Association, 5, 267-285.

Goldstein J., 1989, Console and Classify: The French Psychiatric Profession in the Nineteenth Century, Chicago, University of Chicago Press.

Haley S., 2016, No Mercy Here: Gender, Punishment, and the Making of Jim Crow Modernity, Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press.

Halttunen K., 1998, Murder Most Foul: The Killer and the American Gothic Imagination, Cambridge, Harvard University Press.

Herschthal E., 2017, Antislavery science in the early republic: The case of Dr. BenjaminRush, Early American Studies 15, 2, 274-307.

Huertas R., 1993, Madness and degeneration, II: Alcoholism and degeneration, History of Psychiatry 1993, 4, 13, 1-21.

Kerber L., 1976, The republican mother: Women and the Enlightenment – an American perspective, American Quarterly, 28, 187-205.

Manion J., 2016, Liberty’s Prisoners: Carceral Culture in Early America, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press.

Marsh J., 1783, The Great Sin and Danger of Striving with God, Hartford, Hudson & Goodwin.

Melossi D., 2008, Controlling Crime, Controlling Society: Thinking About Crime in Europe and America, Cambridge, Polity Press.

Melossi D., Sozzo M., Sparks R., 2011, Introduction. Criminal questions: Cultural embeddedness and diffusion, in Melossi M., Sozzo M., Sparks R. (Eds.), Travels of the Criminal Question: Cultural Embeddedness and Diffusion, Oxford, Hart, 1-16.

Meranze M., 1984, The penitential ideal in late eighteenth-century Philadelphia, The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 108, 4, 419-450.

Meranze M., 1989, Introduction, in Rush B. (Ed.), Essays: Literary, Moral and Philosophical, Schenectady, Union College Press.

Meranze M., 1996, Laboratories of Virtue: Punishment, Revolution, and Authority in Philadelphia, 1760-1835, Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press.

Meranze M., 1998, The denials of justice, Law and History Review, 16, 1, 153-157.

Michaud M., 2009, Republicanism and the American Gothic, Cardiff, University of Wales Press.

Miller S., 2018, “Never did I see so universal a frenzy”: The panic of 1791 and the republicanization of Philadelphia, The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 142, 1, 7-48.

Mitchell S., 1783, A Narrative of the Life of William Beadle, Hartford, Webster.

Mogen D., Sanders S., Karpinski J. (Eds.), 1993, Frontier Gothic: Terror and Wonder at the Frontier in American Literature, Teaneck, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.

Monleón J., 2014, A Specter is Haunting Europe: A Sociohistorical Approach to the Fantastic, Princeton, Princeton University Press.

Pickett J., Roche S., Pogarsky G., 2018, Toward a bifurcated theory of emotional deterrence, Criminology, 56, 1, 27-58.

Poskett J., 2017, Phrenology, correspondence, and the global politics of reform, 1815-1848, The Historical Journal 2017, 60, 2, 409-442.

Raaijmakers E., Loughran T., Keijser J., Nieuwbeerta P., Dirkzwager A., 2017, Exploring the relationship between subjectively experienced severity of imprisonment and recidivism: A neglected element in testing deterrence theory, Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 54, 1, 3-28.

Rafter N., 1997, Creating Born Criminals, Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

Rafter N., 2005, The murderous Dutch fiddler: Criminology, history, and the problem of phrenology, Theoretical Criminology, 9, 1, 65-96.

Rafter N., 2009, The Origins of Criminology, London: Routledge.

Rafter N., Posick C., Rocque M., 2016, The Criminal Brain: Understanding Biological Theories of Crime, New York, New York University Press.

Rorabaugh W., 1981, The Alcoholic Republic: An American Tradition, Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Rubin A., 2019, Early US prison history beyond Rothman: Revisiting The Discovery of the Asylum, Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 15, 137-154.

Rubin A., 2021, The Deviant Prison: Philadelphia’s Eastern State Penitentiary and the Origins of America’s Modern Penal System, 1829-1913, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Rush B., 1786, An oration, delivered before the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, Charles Cist.

Rush B., 1787, An Enquiry Into the Effects of Public Punishments Upon Criminals, And Upon Society, Philadelphia, Joseph James.

Rush B., 1790, An Enquiry Into the Effects of Spirituous Liquors on the Human Body. To Which Is Added a Moral and Physical Thermometer, Boston, Thomas and Andrews.

Rush B., 1799, Three Lectures Upon Animal Life, Philadelphia, Dobson.

Rush B., 1812, Medical Inquiries and Observations upon the diseases of the Mind. Philadelphia, Kimber & Richardson.

Rush B., 1951, To Thomas Eddy, in Butterfield L.H. (Ed.), Letters of Benjamin Rush, VolumeII, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 874-876.

Rush B., 1981, Benjamin Rush’s Lectures on the Mind, Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society.

Sedgwick E., 1980, The Coherence of Gothic Conventions, New York, Arno Press.

Sivils M., 2014, Indian captivity narratives and the origins of American frontier gothic, in Crow C. (Ed.), A Companion to American Gothic, Malden, Wiley-Blackwell, 84-94.

Smith C., 2009, The Prison and the American Imagination, New Haven: Yale University Press.

Sullivan R., 1998, The birth of the prison: The case of Benjamin Rush, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 31, 3, 333-344.

Terrell C., 2003 “Republican machines”: Franklin, Rush, and the manufacture of civic virtue in the early republic, Early American Studies, 1, 2, 100-132.

Tomlinson S., 2005, Head Masters: Phrenology, Secular Education, and Nineteenth-century Social Thought, Tuscaloosa, University of Alabama Press.

Vallee E., 2017, “A fatal sympathy”: Suicide and the republic of abjection in the writings of Benjamin Rush and Charles Brockden Brown, Early American Studies 15, 2, 332-351.

Valverde M., 2017, Miserology: A new look at the history of criminology, in Dolovich S., Natapoff A. (Eds.), The New Criminal Justice Thinking, New York, New York University Press, 325-338.

Weber A., 1992, Charles Brockden Brown: Literary Essays and Reviews, Pieterlen, Peter Lang.

Williams D., 2003, Writing under the influence: An examination of Wieland’s “Well Authenticated Facts” and the depiction of murderous fathers in post-revolutionary print culture, Eighteenth-Century Fiction 15, 3-4, 643-668.

Benjamin Rush and the Gothic Origins of American Criminology (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 6354

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (74 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.