An interesting point of where literature and criminology
intersect: From The Murder Room: “But it was
Vidocq’s remarkable story of redemption and his belief in the redemption of
others that touched Fleischer most deeply. The chief cop of Paris was a great friend of the poor and said
he would never arrest a man for stealing bread to feed his family. Vidocq was Hugo’s model for Javert, the
relentless detective in Les Miserables, as well as for Valjean, the excon who
reforms and seeks redemption for his deeds”
(Capuzzo 135). Vidocq was a criminal who
became a detective, and who formed an agency even before Pinkerton. He is considered a father of modern
criminology. This well researched book
by Michael Capuzzo tells the story of The Vidocq Society, named in his honor,
and of three remarkable criminologists who lead the pack of those who would
solve the most unsolvable of crimes.
This blog is an online literary magazine created through original contributions by the students of my CM 107 Composition I and CM 220 Composition II Classes and their Friends from KU.
Friday, January 18, 2019
Thursday, January 3, 2019
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Syward 2019; A Very Special Post by David Levy
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Syward 2019; A Very Special Post by David Levy: Skyward January 2019 For those of us who were alive back then, where were you on Christmas Eve, in the year 1968? I rem...
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