In the 19th century, Italian physician Cesare Lombroso argued we could identify "the born criminal" from physical ...
Citing Regency wig-and-falling-over pioneer, Joseph Grimaldi, the 19th century Italian criminologist, Cesare Lombroso, suggested that clowns were “prone to private melancholy”. Grimaldi fully ...
Both Gastaut et al. 1 and Lombroso 2 consider it to be the drug of choice in this disorder. Most of the patients that have been described have had a history of idiopathic epilepsy before prolonged ...
At its best, especially in the introductory chapter "Rictus Invictus" and in a chapter on "Protoplasmic Predications" in Machen, Navarette’s study offers brilliant insights from her wide reading in ...
Between the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century Cesare Lombroso was one of the most famous Italians in the world He measured the shape and size of the skulls of many criminals ...
In the Victorian era Cesare Lombroso in L’Uomo Delinquent believed that offenders were inferior, “atavistic types” – just like apes – and that it was possible to view an offender’s ...
Crime, Histoire & Sociétés, p. 105. Dunnage, Jonathan 2018. The Work of Cesare Lombroso and its Reception: Further Contexts and Perspectives. Crime, Histoire & Sociétés, p. 5. Musumeci, Emilia 2018.
Musumeci, Emilia 2018. Against the Rising Tide of Crime: Cesare Lombroso and Control of the “Dangerous Classes” in Italy, 1861-1940. Crime, Histoire & Sociétés, p. 83. Campesi, Giuseppe and Fabini, ...