Dying the Bad Death: Critique of the Suicide Burial in Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads”

Mistreatment of the body following a stigmatized death is a culturally relevant issue that disproportionately affects marginalized groups. Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads” details the life and death of a young working class woman through a folkloric retelling of her murder. In this work, I curate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Campbell Pratt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta Library 2024-02-01
Series:Spectrum
Online Access:https://spectrumjournal.ca/index.php/spectrum/article/view/225
_version_ 1827342012552052736
author Campbell Pratt
author_facet Campbell Pratt
author_sort Campbell Pratt
collection DOAJ
description Mistreatment of the body following a stigmatized death is a culturally relevant issue that disproportionately affects marginalized groups. Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads” details the life and death of a young working class woman through a folkloric retelling of her murder. In this work, I curate a historical review of the period’s values regarding stigmatized death, including the religious attitudes regarding suicide and domestic homicide. The previous historical review is then put into dialogue with Southey’s work in order to fully contextualize his criticism of the crossroad burial practice. Moving forward, research may be applied to literary works outside of the 18th century graveyard movement in order to fully understand how and why working class bodies are mistreated in life and death.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T21:59:18Z
format Article
id doaj.art-a37e4f738b7147899a520969e2c52fa2
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2561-7842
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T21:59:18Z
publishDate 2024-02-01
publisher University of Alberta Library
record_format Article
series Spectrum
spelling doaj.art-a37e4f738b7147899a520969e2c52fa22024-02-24T05:34:13ZengUniversity of Alberta LibrarySpectrum2561-78422024-02-011210.29173/spectrum225Dying the Bad Death: Critique of the Suicide Burial in Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads” Campbell Pratt0Cleveland State University Mistreatment of the body following a stigmatized death is a culturally relevant issue that disproportionately affects marginalized groups. Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads” details the life and death of a young working class woman through a folkloric retelling of her murder. In this work, I curate a historical review of the period’s values regarding stigmatized death, including the religious attitudes regarding suicide and domestic homicide. The previous historical review is then put into dialogue with Southey’s work in order to fully contextualize his criticism of the crossroad burial practice. Moving forward, research may be applied to literary works outside of the 18th century graveyard movement in order to fully understand how and why working class bodies are mistreated in life and death. https://spectrumjournal.ca/index.php/spectrum/article/view/225
spellingShingle Campbell Pratt
Dying the Bad Death: Critique of the Suicide Burial in Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads”
Spectrum
title Dying the Bad Death: Critique of the Suicide Burial in Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads”
title_full Dying the Bad Death: Critique of the Suicide Burial in Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads”
title_fullStr Dying the Bad Death: Critique of the Suicide Burial in Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads”
title_full_unstemmed Dying the Bad Death: Critique of the Suicide Burial in Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads”
title_short Dying the Bad Death: Critique of the Suicide Burial in Robert Southey’s “The Cross Roads”
title_sort dying the bad death critique of the suicide burial in robert southey s the cross roads
url https://spectrumjournal.ca/index.php/spectrum/article/view/225
work_keys_str_mv AT campbellpratt dyingthebaddeathcritiqueofthesuicideburialinrobertsoutheysthecrossroads