SECTION 6 DEVIANCE AND SOCIAL CONTROL A History of Murder: Personal Violence in Europe from the Middle Ages to the Present.
Wood, John Carter
A History of Murder: Personal Violence in Europe from the Middle
Ages to the Present. By Pieter Spierenburg (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2008.
274 pp.).
The historical study of interpersonal violence in Europe has grown
significantly in recent decades, and there is a need for an effective
synthesis that can bring together diverse research findings and
introduce non-specialists to this now highly active field. The
unavoidable difficulties with such a summary would be covering the broad
(and somewhat shifting) spectrum of behavior referred to as
"violence" over the last several centuries and accounting for
cultural, regional and national differences. Addressing historical
specificity and historiographical complexity while also offering a
coherent narrative poses a particular challenge. It is, therefore, a
testament to Pieter Spierenburg's skill as a historian of violence
that his hook so often strikes the right balance.
Spierenburg's main theme is the long decline in serious
interpersonal violence (of the sort which today largely falls under the
category of "crime" rather than war or mass-killing) from the
Middle Ages to the mid-twentieth century. The author focuses on violence
among men, especially that motivated by establishing or defending
personal honor. The generally accepted place of such violence in the
medieval period is highlighted: then, the willingness to resort to
violence made sense with regard to both social status and the protection
of personal safety. There was an "omnipresence of feuds--feuds
between rival families, competing factions, neighboring lords and their
retainers, members of opposed camps in a military conflict, or between
two groups that had close internal bonds for still other reasons"
(14-15). Many specific factors changed this state of affairs, and
Spierenburg gives particular attention to state development and shifting
notions of honor.
The importance of state development is brought out clearly through
the examination of the "criminalization" of violence: violent
acts previously seen as legitimate and/or private matters were brought
under the jurisdiction of expanding justice systems. This complicated
process occurred at different rates--and through somewhat different
means--from place to place; however, in this way and across Europe,
previously acceptable (or at least tolerated) violence was ever more
subject to official censure and punishment. An "open consent to
murder formed part of medieval culture" (31); that consent became
increasingly limited.
Following a first chapter on the medieval starting point of his
study, Spierenburg outlines the significant decline in violence from the
fifteenth through the eighteenth centuries. Thematic chapters then
consider male fighting, women's violence, physical conflict in the
domestic sphere and understandings of insanity and diminished
responsibility. The next main chronological step runs from about 1800 to
the 1950s, during which time violence rates seem to have continued their
downward trajectory. Such declines, seemingly paradoxically, were met by
increasing concerns: violence diminished, but its residual image
"darkened" (167), with growing anxieties about crimes
passionnels, serial killing and a violent criminal underworld. Still, he
concludes: "In Europe west of the Iron Curtain, the 1950s were, on
average, the least violent period in history" (203). A final
chapter examines the last half-century, during which violence rates rose
in most European countries. Although a significant trend, the author
makes the point (also attested to by the preceding chapters) that even
these heightened homicide rates remain low by historical standards.
Moreover, rather than an across-the-board reversal of social
pacification, that rise has been narrowly concentrated among younger and
poorer urban males and partly driven by organized crime, especially the
global trade in illegal drugs (207-08).
Given the book's broad scope, it is helpful that it is tied
together by various themes, especially Norbert Elias's theory of
the "civilizing process." Spierenburg typically assumes the
validity of Elias's approach rather than engaging directly with its
critics, but, at times, he argues particular points, such as the
relationship between "ritual" and "impulse" in
violence (35-38) or the key role played by the "pacification of the
elites" (112). On the latter issue, he highlights the growing
distance between those who regularly used violence and those who did
not. Through the "spiritualization of honor," social status
became focused less on the body and more on "inner virtue"
(9). (Spierenburg suggests that a "partial revival in traditional
macho honor" (207) in some contexts may have been a factor in the
post-1970 resurgence in violence.) The complex relationship between real
violent behaviors and their cultural meanings and institutional contexts
is also considered. This leads to the speculation that the post-1970
statistical rise in non-fatal violence--though likely a genuine
trend--may partly be the result of increasing sensitivities and a
greater willingness to involve the police in the wake of physical
altercations (211).
Overall, the book achieves a readable balance between general
trends and regional variation. Non-specialists are offered a coherent
and vivid introduction to the history of violence, while scholars
working in specific national contexts should find its European
perspective useful. There are some questionable claims. For example,
Spierenburg too easily concludes from the absence of a "discourse
of security" in the Middle Ages that people had few personal fears
about violence (51), and, at times, his depiction of the ritualization
of violence seems to insufficiently appreciate the tendency of violence
to break through culturally accepted rules. The book has a dismissive
attitude toward the insights into violence offered by evolutionary
psychology, favoring "cultural explanations" (9). Significant
and persistent differences in male and female participation in violence
(which are well described in these chapters) are thus explained
purely--and unpersuasively--by a "learning process" and
women's conformity to a "cultural stereotype of
passivity" (121). The "great historical shift" proposed
here from "punishment-related" to "tension-related"
(136) spousal violence is not entirely convincing given the significant
underlying psychological continuities in much male violence against
women. Those who reject the notion of the civilizing process may also be
dissatisfied by some of the assumptions here; others may think that
local complexities are insufficiently attended to. Nonetheless, these
criticisms should not overly detract from Spierenburg's remarkable
achievement in drawing together an unusually broad and cross-cultural
collection of materials, summarizing a complex field and offering a
strong and coherent statement about the causes and contexts of
historical changes in violent behavior. This is, and will remain, an
important book.
John Carter Wood
The Open University