关于来源的说明

J. Young
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然历史学家很早就知道存在精神错乱调查法,但有关法律使用的来源仍然难以捉摸,而且没有得到充分的重视。具体地说,虽然关于精神错乱调查法的运作有许多来源,但在进行这一审判程序的大多数司法管辖区,审判证词、法官陈述、律师的介入、上诉和证人陈述都很难找到。为了从跨大西洋的角度书写一部精神错乱调查法律的历史,这本书利用了两个主要来源:一是在《英语报告》中发现的精神错乱审判报告(见下文),二是在新泽西州档案馆中发现的一套基本完整的精神错乱审判手稿。关于19世纪早期英国精神病审判的最全面的出版解释是铃木明仁的《家中的疯癫:1820-1860年英国的精神病医生、病人和家庭》。铃木的分析基于发表在《泰晤士报》上的196份关于疯子的报告。迄今为止,为这些和早期的疯狂委托找到原始手稿来源几乎是不可能的。然而,现在可以在网上找到许多关于精神病的病例报告。《英语报告》是一本179卷的病例报告汇编,时间从1220年到1866年。正如彼得·巴特利特(Peter Bartlett)所指出的,“大量的案例可以追溯到17世纪到19世纪中期”。一种方便的方法是通过搜索引擎Justis获取有关精神病审判的英文报告,该搜索引擎提供了一个广泛的英国法律资源在线图书馆。使用Justis搜索引擎,我收集了200多例精神错乱病例的病例报告,从1598年贝弗利的标志性病例到铃木明仁的病例所涵盖的时期开始
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A NOTE ON SOURCES
Although historians have for a long time known about the existence of lunacy investigation law, the sources relating to the law’s use have remained elusive and underappreciated. Specifically, while there are many sources about the functioning of lunacy investigation law, the trial testimony, judges’ statements, lawyers’ interventions, appeals and witness statements have been difficult to locate for most jurisdictions in which this trial process took place. In order to write a history of lunacy investigation law in transatlantic perspective, this book has exploited two major sources: reports on lunacy trials that are found in the English Reports (see below), and a largely intact set of lunacy trial manuscripts found in the New Jersey State Archives. The most comprehensive published interpretation of English lunacy trials for the early nineteenth-century period is Akihito Suzuki’s Madness at Home: The Psychiatrist, the Patient, and the Family in England, 1820–1860. Suzuki’s analysis is based on 196 commissions of lunacy that were published in The Times newspaper. Finding the original manuscript sources for these and earlier commissions of lunacy has so far proved next to impossible. However, case reports of many lunacy trials are now available online. The English Reports is a 179-volume compilation of case reports dating from 1220 to 1866. As Peter Bartlett notes, ‘the vast bulk of the cases date from the seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries’. A convenient way to access English Reports relating to lunacy trials is through the search engine Justis, which, among other resources, provides an extensive online library of legal sources for the United Kingdom. Using the Justis search engine, I have collected case reports for over two hundred cases in lunacy, dating from Beverley’s landmark case in 1598 to the beginning of the period covered by Akihito Suzuki’s
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