‘The Criminal Crowd’ and other writings on Mass Society

Apr 25, 2018 865

The Criminal Crowd and Other Writings on Mass Society is the first English collection of writings by Italian jurist, sociologist, cultural and literary critic Scipio Sighele. Sighele is largely responsible for providing post-unification Italy with a new outlook on issues ranging from the blurring line between individual and collective accountability, the role of urbanization in the development of criminality, and the emancipation of women.

Nicoletta Pireddu contextualizes Sighele’s contribution to the so-called ‘age-of crowds,’ from the fierce polemic with his French rivals Gustave LeBon and Gabriel Tarde to the scientific, literary, and cultural developments of his conceptualization of mass behaviours as a legitimate object of psychological investigation into a new century. Hardcover ISBN 978-1-4875-0318-5 $115.00 / eBook ISBN 978-1-4875-1736-6 $115.00 / 496 pp. Available August 2018. Price, discount, and availability subject to change. Order now online and receive a 25% discount at: www.utorontopress.com

SCIPIO SIGHELE (1868-1913) an Italian sociologist and criminologist, was born in Brescia on June 24, 1868. After finishing the course in Law University of Rome, in 1892-1902 he taught at the Free University of Brussels.

NICOLETTA PIREDDU (Ph.D. Comparative Literature, UCLA; Dottorato, English and American Literatures, Ca’ Foscari University, Venice) is Professor of Italian and Comparative Literature at Georgetown University.

ANDREW ROBBINS is a PhD candidate in Italian at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ. This work draws a multifaceted portrait of a provocative thinker and public
intellectual caught between tradition and modernity during the European fin de siècle. Containing a comprehensive introduction by the editor, The Criminal Crowd and Other Writings on Mass Society includes Sighele’s seminal work, The Criminal Crowd, as well as his formative studies on group behaviour.

TOM HUHN is the chair of the Art History and BFA Visual & Critical Studies Departments at the School of Visual Arts in New York City.

You may be interested