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The Devil and Modernity in Late Nineteenth-Century Buenos Aires

    1. [1] University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

      University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

      City of Milwaukee, Estados Unidos

  • Localización: The Americas: A quarterly review of inter-american cultural history, ISSN 0003-1615, Vol. 59, Nº. 2, 2002, págs. 221-233
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • In the late nineteenth century, the move away from classical criminology toward positivist criminology brought with it new categories of crime and new definitions of the criminal. A great deal of scholarship has focused on positivism's new approach, which grew out of research in Europe, especially in France and Italy, and later took hold in Argentina and other Latin American countries. It might be supposed that as a state's judicial and penal authorities and doctors of forensic medicine were becoming more professionalized and positivist at this time, and as state and society were becoming more secularized and urbanized, such a traditional figure as the devil would have disappeared from criminal court cases.


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