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All that is wicked, the 'Victorian Hannibal Lecter' and the race to decode the criminal mind, Kate Winkler Dawson

Label
All that is wicked, the 'Victorian Hannibal Lecter' and the race to decode the criminal mind, Kate Winkler Dawson
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
resource.biographical
contains biographical information
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
All that is wicked
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
Kate Winkler Dawson
Sub title
the 'Victorian Hannibal Lecter' and the race to decode the criminal mind
Summary
The story of Edward Rulloff, a serial murderer who was called 'too intelligent to be killed' and the array of 19th-century investigators who were convinced his brain held the key to finally understanding the criminal mind. Rulloff was a brilliant yet utterly amoral murderer, some have called him a 'Victorian-era Hannibal Lecter' whose crimes spanned decades, but by 1871 he was captured, chained in a cell, a psychopath holding court while curious 19th-century 'mindhunters' got to work. From alienists (early psychiatrists who tried to analyse the source of his madness) to neurologists (who wanted to dissect his brain) to phrenologists (who analysed the bumps on his head to determine his character), each one thought he held the key to understanding the essential question: is evil born or made? Expanding on her podcast, Tenfold More Wicked, acclaimed crime historian Kate Winkler Dawson draws on hundreds of source materials and never-before-shared historical documents to present one of the first glimpses into the mind of a serial killer, a century before the term was coined, through the scientists whose work would come to influence criminal justice for decades to come
Target audience
adult
Content

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