
2. Origins of Modern Policing
Why the violent crime-obsessed Victorians initially resisted an organised police force. Read by Robert Glenister.
Despite rising crime figures - and increasingly crowded cities - the public were reluctant to accept the establishment of an organised police force.
This episode examines the reasons for that unwillingness and offers a fascinating insight into the origins of modern policing.
Over the course of the 19th century, murder - in reality a rarity - became ubiquitous: transformed into novels, into broadsides and ballads, into theatre and melodrama.
Seeing therein the foundation of modern notions of crime, Judith Flanders explores this fascination with deadly violence by relating some of the century's most gripping and gruesome cases and the ways in which they were commercially exploited.
Read by Robert Glenister.
Abridged by David Jackson Young.
Producer: Kirsteen Cameron
First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in January 2011.
Last on
Broadcasts
- Tue 11 Jan 201109:45BBC Radio 4 FM
- Wed 12 Jan 201100:30BBC Radio 4
- Tue 28 Jul 201511:00BBC Radio 4 Extra
- Tue 28 Jul 201521:00BBC Radio 4 Extra
- Tue 26 Apr 202214:15BBC Radio 4 Extra
- Wed 27 Apr 202202:15BBC Radio 4 Extra
