Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Cultural Rhetoric of Capital Punishment
1. Anti-gallows Activism in Antebellum American Law and Literature
2. Simms, Child, and the Aesthetics of Crime and Punishment
3. Literary Executions in Cooper, Lippard, and Judd
4. Hawthorne and the Evidentiary Value of Literature
5. Melville, MacKenzie, and Military Executions
6. Capital Punishment and the Criminal Justice System in Dreiser's An American Tragedy
Epilogue: ""The Death Penalty in Literature""
Notes
Index

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Description
""Overall, Barton's Literary Executions is an originally executed and consistently compelling study that resurrects and foregrounds the second abolition movement of the American nineteenth century... Through innovative cross-examinations and nuanced close readings, Barton lays the groundwork for a further and much needed analysis of the real influence wielded by literature in the debate around the abolition of lawful death.""
