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- Title
First Impressions: Footprints as Forensic Evidence in Crime in Fact and Fiction.
- Authors
David, Alison Matthews
- Abstract
As skilled 'detectives', dress historians are experts in closely reading surviving artefacts and using them to glean evidence of the lives of those who made and wore them. With shoes and footwear, this rich, object-based approach can yield new information that challenges established histories. This article turns traditional object analysis on its head by interrogating instead the impressions and traces that objects leave behind, taking a forensic approach to footwear. It examines the rise of scientific policing and the history of footprints as a key form of evidence in crime fact and fiction. Five key British and Francophone stories and novels written between 1833 and 1931 provide a barometer of how narratives of the capital offence of murder and footwear evidence shifted during this century. These are interwoven with contemporary forensic science texts, police handbooks, newspaper articles and trial transcripts from the Central Criminal Court of England and Wales, commonly known as the Old Bailey. This article charts the shift in perceptions that occurred between 1830 and 1890, which I call the 'Age of Conviction', a period where there was a widespread belief in the veracity of prints, to an 'Age of Suspicion' from 1890 to 1930, as more scientific and critical methods of examination and recording made detectives and the public sceptical and wary of deception.
- Subjects
SHOES; BOOTS; GREAT Britain. Central Criminal Court; HOLMES, Sherlock (Fictional character); BERTILLON, Alphonse; FRENCH-speaking people
- Publication
Costume: Journal of the Costume Society, 2019, Vol 53, Issue 1, p43
- ISSN
0590-8876
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3366/cost.2019.0095