Professionals and armchair detectives alike have been profiling and psychoanalyzing 'Jack the Ripper' for many years. Needless to say, if we were able to understand what made the Ripper tick, we'd have a better chance of narrowing down who he was. In theory, at least. The odds of solving the case once and for all are practically zero, unless someone happens to find some groundbreaking new evidence.
When we examine the killer's motives, what do the murders tell us about them? The murders are often viewed as an attack on the victim's femininity, through targeting the abdominal areas, stealing the reproductive organs and defacing two of the victims. What kind of satisfaction do you think it brought him to remove the innards of his victims, and the complete butchery of Mary Jane Kelly? Why remove the uterus in one case, then the uterus AND a kidney in another? What significance did these 'trophies' possess, if any? Was Jack trying to steal their womanhood? Was he taking pride in his work?
Jack was not an ordinary murderer, he didn't appear to kill for killing's sake, or betray a sadistic streak (in the strictest sense), as his victims were killed almost instantly. It could be argued that killing was just a means to an end that facilitated the post-mortem mutilations. What was Jack trying to SAY with this signature and the positioning of the bodies?
I don't want this to descend into a typical "There was no Ripper" or "x wasn't a victim" etc., not because those arguments don't have merit, but because I feel they've been done to death, and would no doubt digress from the overall point. Looking at this from the accepted viewpoint that Jack the Ripper killed at least the canonical five, what can we surmise from those murders about our man? Or are we guilty of looking into things too deeply, when in truth Jack might not have had any method to his madness?
When we examine the killer's motives, what do the murders tell us about them? The murders are often viewed as an attack on the victim's femininity, through targeting the abdominal areas, stealing the reproductive organs and defacing two of the victims. What kind of satisfaction do you think it brought him to remove the innards of his victims, and the complete butchery of Mary Jane Kelly? Why remove the uterus in one case, then the uterus AND a kidney in another? What significance did these 'trophies' possess, if any? Was Jack trying to steal their womanhood? Was he taking pride in his work?
Jack was not an ordinary murderer, he didn't appear to kill for killing's sake, or betray a sadistic streak (in the strictest sense), as his victims were killed almost instantly. It could be argued that killing was just a means to an end that facilitated the post-mortem mutilations. What was Jack trying to SAY with this signature and the positioning of the bodies?
I don't want this to descend into a typical "There was no Ripper" or "x wasn't a victim" etc., not because those arguments don't have merit, but because I feel they've been done to death, and would no doubt digress from the overall point. Looking at this from the accepted viewpoint that Jack the Ripper killed at least the canonical five, what can we surmise from those murders about our man? Or are we guilty of looking into things too deeply, when in truth Jack might not have had any method to his madness?
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