Considering all the discussion about topics like the actual letter giving that name "Jack the Ripper" being a hoax, and the debates about which murders were by the same hand-- I've even read one argument that they all are by different hands, and there was no serial killer in Whitechapel in 1888, which was compelling, but ultimately just short of convincing.
Anyway, it got me to thinking, what makes the Ripper? Suppose we were to find out that three different people killed the five canonicals: which one would we call Jack? If one of them wrote a letter, any letter, would that count? Suppose we identified the writer of the "Jack the Ripper" letter, and he turned out to have killed Martha Tabram, but no one else? Would he get to be the official Jack the Ripper, even if say, Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes and Kelly were all killed by one person, who never wrote a letter.
If we could magically answer all the questions of who killed who, and who wrote each letter, but they didn't fall neatly into expectations-- the canonicals were by different hands, some killer wrote at least one letter, but most were hoaxes, and one killer of one of the canonicals killed other women known as "possibles," but nothing is easy, what is the bare minimum for you to say that "This person was Jack," and the others were just murderers or letter hoaxers.
For me, if the author of the "Jack the Ripper" letter killed anyone, then he is Jack. Otherwise, anyone who killed at least two of the canonicals is. If more than one person killed at least two, then I think we have to say, even if it sounds funny, "Jack was two people." If the canonicals were killed by five different people, then there never was a Jack, even if it happens that the man who killed Annie Chapman also killed Martha Tabram, and the man who killed Polly Nichols killed one of the post-MJK victims.
Anyway, it got me to thinking, what makes the Ripper? Suppose we were to find out that three different people killed the five canonicals: which one would we call Jack? If one of them wrote a letter, any letter, would that count? Suppose we identified the writer of the "Jack the Ripper" letter, and he turned out to have killed Martha Tabram, but no one else? Would he get to be the official Jack the Ripper, even if say, Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes and Kelly were all killed by one person, who never wrote a letter.
If we could magically answer all the questions of who killed who, and who wrote each letter, but they didn't fall neatly into expectations-- the canonicals were by different hands, some killer wrote at least one letter, but most were hoaxes, and one killer of one of the canonicals killed other women known as "possibles," but nothing is easy, what is the bare minimum for you to say that "This person was Jack," and the others were just murderers or letter hoaxers.
For me, if the author of the "Jack the Ripper" letter killed anyone, then he is Jack. Otherwise, anyone who killed at least two of the canonicals is. If more than one person killed at least two, then I think we have to say, even if it sounds funny, "Jack was two people." If the canonicals were killed by five different people, then there never was a Jack, even if it happens that the man who killed Annie Chapman also killed Martha Tabram, and the man who killed Polly Nichols killed one of the post-MJK victims.
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