Thanks, Jon. Much appreciated.
I'm afraid I left the "toff" camp years back.
If you look at the historiography of Ripper studies, there are a series of "waves":
Matters (c 1929) to Farson and Cullen (60s) - The Toff/doctors
Knight (post watergate) 70s etc - Conspiracy
1987/88 (the centenary) - Kosminski and a local man.
2000ish -celebrity suspects
Today -no one is sure/post modern deconstructionism.
Over the years I have come to perceive the "trends" in Ripper suspects as reflecting social and cultural issues of the day.
But the idea of the "toff" though visually iconic, strikes me as rather like the idea that aliens created Egyptian or Sumerian civilisation because the locals weren't capable. When in Egypt I asked local guides about the reactions to von Daniken, Hancock etc. They were all very angry at the implied insult to their own people. Half-jokingly, I think East Enders could take similar offence to the idea that an "outsider" has to come in to be the first serial killer, that he could not emerge from local alientation, urbanisation etc.
The same is true about celebrity suspects - easy for the dilettante to research because so much material exists. Much more difficult to research a member of the great unwashed. But look at the results that come from the work being done by Scott Nelson, Rob House and others on Kosminski and recent articles that have opened up new avenues of thought and possibility.
I conclude that I was right to abandon the "toff" suspects when I was in my salad days. Not, of course, that one can just reject Druitt because he is a contemporary suspect, but nothing Jonathan and others have argued comes near to convincing me that he is our man.
Phil
I'm afraid I left the "toff" camp years back.
If you look at the historiography of Ripper studies, there are a series of "waves":
Matters (c 1929) to Farson and Cullen (60s) - The Toff/doctors
Knight (post watergate) 70s etc - Conspiracy
1987/88 (the centenary) - Kosminski and a local man.
2000ish -celebrity suspects
Today -no one is sure/post modern deconstructionism.
Over the years I have come to perceive the "trends" in Ripper suspects as reflecting social and cultural issues of the day.
But the idea of the "toff" though visually iconic, strikes me as rather like the idea that aliens created Egyptian or Sumerian civilisation because the locals weren't capable. When in Egypt I asked local guides about the reactions to von Daniken, Hancock etc. They were all very angry at the implied insult to their own people. Half-jokingly, I think East Enders could take similar offence to the idea that an "outsider" has to come in to be the first serial killer, that he could not emerge from local alientation, urbanisation etc.
The same is true about celebrity suspects - easy for the dilettante to research because so much material exists. Much more difficult to research a member of the great unwashed. But look at the results that come from the work being done by Scott Nelson, Rob House and others on Kosminski and recent articles that have opened up new avenues of thought and possibility.
I conclude that I was right to abandon the "toff" suspects when I was in my salad days. Not, of course, that one can just reject Druitt because he is a contemporary suspect, but nothing Jonathan and others have argued comes near to convincing me that he is our man.
Phil
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