Interpreting Murder Medically A Medico-Legal Case from an Early 20th Century European Periphery

The paper takes as its departure point a murder case from 1911, when four siblings killed their younger brother in a remote location in northern Norway. This episode becomes an occasion for discussing medical and juridical interpretations of human agency at the turn of the century, and especially of...

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Main Author: SKÅLEVÅG, Svein Atle
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: European University Institute 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1814/7356
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spelling fteuinstitute:oai:cadmus.eui.eu:1814/7356 2023-05-15T17:43:31+02:00 Interpreting Murder Medically A Medico-Legal Case from an Early 20th Century European Periphery SKÅLEVÅG, Svein Atle 2007 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1814/7356 en eng European University Institute EUI MWP 2007/21 1830-7728 http://hdl.handle.net/1814/7356 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Forensic psychiatry history of medicine criminal responsibility racism Norway info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper 2007 fteuinstitute 2022-02-19T14:13:26Z The paper takes as its departure point a murder case from 1911, when four siblings killed their younger brother in a remote location in northern Norway. This episode becomes an occasion for discussing medical and juridical interpretations of human agency at the turn of the century, and especially of the role of some conception of ‘race’ in these interpretations. The men of medicine and of law sought to give an explanation of what had taken place, and these explanations, as they have been left in the sources, provides us with clues to two different interpretational modes. Four physicians were involved in the case in order to interpret the act and assess the mental state of the defendants. For at least two of them, the racial make-up of the ethnic group to which the actors belonged constituted an inevitable part of the context that made the act intelligible. While the concept or race, and the frameworks of Degenerationism, to a certain degree made the act intelligible, these interpretational schemes had little to offer in terms of assessing the legal accountability of the defendants. Hence the case illustrates the profound epistemological limits of the medical interpretation in facing a legal case. Report Northern Norway European University Institute, Italy: Cadmus (EUI Research Repository) Norway Departure Point ENVELOPE(-98.836,-98.836,79.669,79.669)
institution Open Polar
collection European University Institute, Italy: Cadmus (EUI Research Repository)
op_collection_id fteuinstitute
language English
topic Forensic psychiatry
history of medicine
criminal responsibility
racism
Norway
spellingShingle Forensic psychiatry
history of medicine
criminal responsibility
racism
Norway
SKÅLEVÅG, Svein Atle
Interpreting Murder Medically A Medico-Legal Case from an Early 20th Century European Periphery
topic_facet Forensic psychiatry
history of medicine
criminal responsibility
racism
Norway
description The paper takes as its departure point a murder case from 1911, when four siblings killed their younger brother in a remote location in northern Norway. This episode becomes an occasion for discussing medical and juridical interpretations of human agency at the turn of the century, and especially of the role of some conception of ‘race’ in these interpretations. The men of medicine and of law sought to give an explanation of what had taken place, and these explanations, as they have been left in the sources, provides us with clues to two different interpretational modes. Four physicians were involved in the case in order to interpret the act and assess the mental state of the defendants. For at least two of them, the racial make-up of the ethnic group to which the actors belonged constituted an inevitable part of the context that made the act intelligible. While the concept or race, and the frameworks of Degenerationism, to a certain degree made the act intelligible, these interpretational schemes had little to offer in terms of assessing the legal accountability of the defendants. Hence the case illustrates the profound epistemological limits of the medical interpretation in facing a legal case.
format Report
author SKÅLEVÅG, Svein Atle
author_facet SKÅLEVÅG, Svein Atle
author_sort SKÅLEVÅG, Svein Atle
title Interpreting Murder Medically A Medico-Legal Case from an Early 20th Century European Periphery
title_short Interpreting Murder Medically A Medico-Legal Case from an Early 20th Century European Periphery
title_full Interpreting Murder Medically A Medico-Legal Case from an Early 20th Century European Periphery
title_fullStr Interpreting Murder Medically A Medico-Legal Case from an Early 20th Century European Periphery
title_full_unstemmed Interpreting Murder Medically A Medico-Legal Case from an Early 20th Century European Periphery
title_sort interpreting murder medically a medico-legal case from an early 20th century european periphery
publisher European University Institute
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1814/7356
long_lat ENVELOPE(-98.836,-98.836,79.669,79.669)
geographic Norway
Departure Point
geographic_facet Norway
Departure Point
genre Northern Norway
genre_facet Northern Norway
op_relation EUI MWP
2007/21
1830-7728
http://hdl.handle.net/1814/7356
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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