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Author Rotunda, Michele, author.

Title A drunkard's defense alcohol, murder, and medical jurisprudence in nineteenth-century America / Michele Rotunda
Published Amherst : University of Massachusetts Press, [2021]

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Description 1 online resource
Contents "Not the result of drink" -- "A victim of intemperance" -- "Not capable of entertaining this specific intent" -- "The broad resemblances between insanity and drunkenness" -- "They are simply drunk" -- "An apology for sin and for crime."
Summary "Is drunkenness a defense for murder? In the early nineteenth century, the answer was a resounding no. Intoxication was considered voluntary, and thus provided no defense. Yet as the century progressed, American courts began to extend exculpatory value to heavy drinking. The medicalization of alcohol use created new categories of mental illness which, alongside changes in the law, formed the basis for defense arguments that claimed unintended consequences and lack of criminal intent. Concurrently, advocates of prohibition cast "demon rum" and the "rum-seller" as the drunkard's accomplices in crime, mitigating offenders' actions. By the postbellum period, a backlash, led by medical professionals and an influential temperance movement, left the legacy of an unsettled legal standard. In A Drunkard's Defense, Michele Rotunda examines a variety of court cases to explore the attitudes of nineteenth-century physicians, legal professionals, temperance advocates, and ordinary Americans toward the relationship between drunkenness, violence, and responsibility, providing broader insights into the country's complicated relationship with alcohol"-- Provided by publisher
Subject Drunkenness (Crime) -- Law and legislation -- United States -- History
Defense (Criminal procedure) -- United States -- History
HISTORY / General
Defense (Criminal procedure)
Drunkenness (Crime) -- Law and legislation
United States
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781613767993
1613767994