Crime, Punishment, and Popular Culture in Early America, 1674-1860
The following American Studies Seminar research papers were written by students in the 2001 seminar, "Crime, Punishment, and Popular Culture in Early America, 1674-1860," under the supervision of Daniel A. Cohen.
- "Verses for the Gallows: The Evolution of the American Dying Verses: Theft and Murder!," by Eric Aldrich
- "A Piracy Trail [i.e., trial] Reconsidered," by Megan Bocian
- "Evolving Parent-Child Relationships: Their Connection to Acts of Parricide in the Nineteenth Century," by Julia Crowley
- "An Analysis of Publications Involving Juvenile Offenders from the Years 1780 to 1830," by Dan Esposito
- "Love, Death and Honor: Who Bears Moral Guilt in 'The Kentucky Tragedy?'," by Chanel Prunier
- "Emergence of Social Progress in Early Nineteenth Century America: Evidence of Modern Thinking in the Case of Stephen Merrill Clarke," by Christine Ruffini
- "Arsenic and Old Lydia: A Discussion of Sociopathy and Ascribed Identity in the Serial Poisoner Lydia Sherman," by Rachel Scanlon
- "An Untimely End or a Just Condemnation: Women's and Men's Narrative Voices in Criminal Publications," by Stephanie Skenyon
- "Murder, Monomania, and the Passionless Female Ideal in the Nineteenth Century," by Lauren Wojtkun.