Les enfermements d’un vagabond criminel. Vacher, tueur de bergers

This contribution proposes to give an account of the succession of confinements experienced by a serial killer who was essentially presented and represented as the typical vagabond, a great walker and free to move about, perpetuating a “bloody odyssey”. Joseph Vacher (1869-1898) nevertheless experie...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marc Renneville
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Criminocorpus
Series:Criminocorpus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/criminocorpus/13238
_version_ 1797308235918606336
author Marc Renneville
author_facet Marc Renneville
author_sort Marc Renneville
collection DOAJ
description This contribution proposes to give an account of the succession of confinements experienced by a serial killer who was essentially presented and represented as the typical vagabond, a great walker and free to move about, perpetuating a “bloody odyssey”. Joseph Vacher (1869-1898) nevertheless experienced the main institutions of confinement at the end of the 19th century: school, religious congregation, barracks, asylum and prison. How did he experience them and what role did these experiences play in his perception of the world? Secondly, we will ask to what extent these confinements contributed, after Vacher’s arrest, to the reflection on the motives for his act? In conclusion, we will point out the difficulty of accessing the subjectivity of our objects of study because this approach implies, for the historian, a return to oneself and a deconstruction of transmitted memories.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T01:08:41Z
format Article
id doaj.art-c788f1ad0c624e018cbfe7d06e8ecf18
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2108-6907
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T01:08:41Z
publisher Criminocorpus
record_format Article
series Criminocorpus
spelling doaj.art-c788f1ad0c624e018cbfe7d06e8ecf182024-02-14T16:26:12ZengCriminocorpusCriminocorpus2108-69072310.4000/criminocorpus.13238Les enfermements d’un vagabond criminel. Vacher, tueur de bergersMarc RennevilleThis contribution proposes to give an account of the succession of confinements experienced by a serial killer who was essentially presented and represented as the typical vagabond, a great walker and free to move about, perpetuating a “bloody odyssey”. Joseph Vacher (1869-1898) nevertheless experienced the main institutions of confinement at the end of the 19th century: school, religious congregation, barracks, asylum and prison. How did he experience them and what role did these experiences play in his perception of the world? Secondly, we will ask to what extent these confinements contributed, after Vacher’s arrest, to the reflection on the motives for his act? In conclusion, we will point out the difficulty of accessing the subjectivity of our objects of study because this approach implies, for the historian, a return to oneself and a deconstruction of transmitted memories.https://journals.openedition.org/criminocorpus/13238serial killerprisonconfinementVacher (Joseph)vagabond
spellingShingle Marc Renneville
Les enfermements d’un vagabond criminel. Vacher, tueur de bergers
Criminocorpus
serial killer
prison
confinement
Vacher (Joseph)
vagabond
title Les enfermements d’un vagabond criminel. Vacher, tueur de bergers
title_full Les enfermements d’un vagabond criminel. Vacher, tueur de bergers
title_fullStr Les enfermements d’un vagabond criminel. Vacher, tueur de bergers
title_full_unstemmed Les enfermements d’un vagabond criminel. Vacher, tueur de bergers
title_short Les enfermements d’un vagabond criminel. Vacher, tueur de bergers
title_sort les enfermements d un vagabond criminel vacher tueur de bergers
topic serial killer
prison
confinement
Vacher (Joseph)
vagabond
url https://journals.openedition.org/criminocorpus/13238
work_keys_str_mv AT marcrenneville lesenfermementsdunvagabondcriminelvachertueurdebergers