James and John
Knihu koupíte v
1 e-shopu
od
275 Kč
Pokud se vám po kliknutí na tlačítko "Do obchodu" nezobrazí stránka knihy ve vybraném e-shopu, je třeba vypnout AdBlock ve vašem prohlížeči pro naši stránku.
Návod na vypnutí je například na adrese https://o.seznam.cz/jak-vypnout-adblock/#1.
Bookshop.cz
275 Kč
Skladem
(dodání do 3 dnů)
a
1
další varianta
Bookshop.cz
625 Kč
Skladem
(dodání do 3 dnů)
Krátký popis
*A BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week*‘Carefully observed, rich in
detail, imaginative, compassionate and angry. A raw, unexpected
portrait of Britain’s grandeur, wealth, energy, cruelty and
hypocrisy in the age of liberalism’ RORY STEWART''A shocking story
of prejudice and injustice, told in meticulous detail'' KEIR
STARMERFrom award-winning historian and Sunday Times bestselling
author Chris Bryant MP, James and John tells the story of what it
meant to be gay in early 19th-century Britain through the lens of a
landmark trial.They had nothing to expect from the mercy of the
crown; their doom was sealed; no plea could be urged in extenuation
of their crime, and they well knew that for them there was no hope
in this world.When Charles Dickens wrote these tragic lines he was
penning fact, not fiction. He had visited the condemned cells at
the infamous prison at Newgate, where seventeen men who had been
sentenced to death were awaiting news of their pleas for mercy. Two
men stood out: James Pratt and John Smith, who had been convicted
of homosexuality. Theirs was ‘an unnatural offence’, a crime so
unmentionable it was never named. That was why they alone despaired
and, as the turnkey told Dickens, why they alone were ‘dead men’.
The 1830s ushered in great change in Britain. In a few short years
the government swept away slavery, rotten boroughs, child labour,
bribery and corruption in elections, the ban on trades unions and
civil marriage. They also curtailed the ‘bloody code’ that treated
200 petty crimes as capital offences. Some thought the death
penalty itself was wrong. There had not been a hanging at Newgate
for two years; hundreds were reprieved. Yet when the King met with
his ‘hanging’ Cabinet, they decided to reprieve all bar James and
John. When the two men were led to the gallows, the crowd hissed
and shouted. In this masterful work of history, Chris Bryant delves
deep into the public archives, scouring poor law records, workhouse
registers, prisoner calendars and private correspondence to
recreate the lives of two men whose names are known to history –
but whose story has been lost, until now.