Originally posted by bjgourley
					
						
						
							
							
							
							
								
								
								
								
								
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		Rippercast Reviews 'The Five' by Hallie Rubenhold
				
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 This is a really troubling and sadly common occurrence today when it comes to all manner of criticism. We live in such a divided and binary age - based on what I saw from Hallie's Twitter feed (and admittedly I haven't the interest or patience to look into it too deeply), she presents in this very unhelpfully modern fashion where every oppositional voice is that of this invisible patriarchal evil coming to tear down the voices of women thinkers. There's then this very disingenuous implication that arises from her comments which seems to attach subsequent Ripperology into this perceived dehumanisation/indignity applied to the canonical victims over time, which is frankly outrageous and the complete opposite of what so many have spent lives and careers investigating. I'm sure she could validly take up such complaints with the content and iconography of mainstream Ripper visual medias (all the trashy movies and novels about or based on it, the London Dungeon exhibits etc), but to actively shun the biggest collective ally of these women's legacy is pretty abhorrent.
 
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 It's a well-written book, but there are better books on the lives of the Victorian poor out there, which is primarily what "The Five" turned out to be. There's nothing particularly revelatory about the women themselves, at least not if you've read Begg/Sugden/Shelden etc, and some of what is written about them is speculative. It's not a "Ripper" book, because it doesn't delve too much into the details of the case; this would be fine, were it not for the fact that some of those details are inconsistent with some of the speculations put forward in the book. I can't finally recommend it on that basis.Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostI don’t buy many ripper books these days Sam but is it worth getting?Kind regards, Sam Flynn
 
 "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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 That’s good enough for me Sam and kind of what I suspected from reading what has been written about it so far. I’ll have to get around to listening to the podcast though.Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostIt's a well-written book, but there are better books on the lives of the Victorian poor out there, which is primarily what "The Five" turned out to be. There's nothing particularly revelatory about the women themselves, at least not if you've read Begg/Sugden/Shelden etc, and some of what is written about them is speculative. It's not a "Ripper" book, because it doesn't delve too much into the details of the case; this would be fine, were it not for the fact that some of those details are inconsistent with some of the speculations put forward in the book. I can't finally recommend it on that basis.
 
 Thanks Sam Herlock Sholmes Herlock Sholmes 
 
 ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”
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 The author claims that the women were automatically assumed to be prostitutes by the press because their bodies were found on the streets.
 
 She takes a paragraph from a press report about Polly and amends it to support her contention.
 
 Here’’s the paragraph in full, the words in bold are the only ones the author includes in the book
 
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 Hello Gary,Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostThe author claims that the women were automatically assumed to be prostitutes by the press because their bodies were found on the streets.
 
 She takes a paragraph from a press report about Polly and amends it to support her contention.
 
 Here’’s the paragraph in full, the words in bold are the only ones the author includes in the book
 
 I don’t know what’s worse, the fact that she was so dishonest as to use selective quoting, or the fact that she was stupid enough to assume that no one would notice? I mean, it’s not as if people study the case is it Herlock Sholmes Herlock Sholmes 
 
 ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”
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 Which is why she and her acolytes have expended so much energy demonising ’Ripperologists’ on social media.Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
 Hello Gary,
 
 I don’t know what’s worse, the fact that she was so dishonest as to use selective quoting, or the fact that she was stupid enough to assume that no one would notice? I mean, it’s not as if people study the case is it 
 
 One of them claimed to have spent 53 seconds on Casebook and pegged its members as ‘morons’.
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 Gareth,Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostIt's a well-written book, but there are better books on the lives of the Victorian poor out there, which is primarily what "The Five" turned out to be. There's nothing particularly revelatory about the women themselves, at least not if you've read Begg/Sugden/Shelden etc, and some of what is written about them is speculative. It's not a "Ripper" book, because it doesn't delve too much into the details of the case; this would be fine, were it not for the fact that some of those details are inconsistent with some of the speculations put forward in the book. I can't finally recommend it on that basis.
 
 Of course it’s a Ripper book - it has JTR in the title and it focuses exclusively on the C5. The only reason those five women were chosen is because of who may have killed them.
 
 If it had been about any other five women who met a violent end in the East End in the 1880s, would it have received so much attention?
 
 Gary
 
 
 
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