Category: Crime, U.S. National Library of Medicine, United States
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History of Medicine EVER SINCE THE INVENTION OF moveable type in the mid-1400s, the public’s appetite for tales of shocking murders —“true crime” —has been an enduring aspect of the market for printed material. For more than five centuries, murder pamphlets have been hawked on street corners, town squares, taverns, coffeehouses, news stands, and book shops. Typically, a local printer would put together a pamphlet that claimed to be a true account of a murder, consisting of a narrative, trial transcript, and/or written confession of the murderer before his or her execution. 13 September 2010
Crime | English | Execution | Image | Law | Maryland | Murder | Pamphlets | Text | U.S. National Library of Medicine | United States | Criminology & Forensics | Publishing | Business & Reference | Social Sciences
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