In:Diachronic Developments in English News Discourse
Edited by Minna Palander-Collin, Maura Ratia and Irma Taavitsainen
[Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics 6] 2017
► pp. 199–216
Chapter 11The public identity of Jack the Ripper in late nineteenth-century British newspapers
Published online: 29 August 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/ahs.6.11nev
https://doi.org/10.1075/ahs.6.11nev
Abstract
The article studies evaluative language in 200 newspaper articles from the latter half of 1888, focusing on the five canonical Ripper murders. The aim is to study terms used to refer to the Ripper and his murders on the basis of the parameters of intensity, solidarity, and objectivity. This pilot study discusses how in the newspapers the public identity of Jack the Ripper was ultimately developed from a plain perpetrator into a murderous maniac capable of monstrous deeds. The findings indicate that an increase in intensity seems to be linked to a decrease in both solidarity and objectivity. Thus, negative evaluation was increasingly used and person reference to the Ripper changed towards extreme negativity over a relatively short period of time.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Social identity and language use
- 2.1Social identity construction
- 2.2Evaluative language
- 3.Crime and criminals in late nineteenth-century British newspapers
- 4.Murderer most foul: Studying Jack the Ripper
- 4.1The Ripper murders in closer view
- 4.2Material and method in the current study
- 5.Reference in the Ripper news
- 5.1Mary Ann Nichols
- 5.2Annie Chapman
- 5.3Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes
- 5.4Mary Jane Kelly
- 6.Concluding the Ripper evaluation
Notes References
References (25)
Allport, Gordon. 1986. The language of prejudice. In Paul Escholz, Alfred Rosa & Virginia Clark (eds.), Language awareness, 261–270. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
Bednarek, Monica. 2006. Evaluation in media discourse: Analysis of a newspaper corpus. London: Continuum.
Casebook: Jack the Ripper. 2015 [URL]. (19 Jan 2015.)
Clark, Kate. 1992. The linguistics of blame: Representations of women in the Sun reporting of crimes of sexual violence. In Michael Toolan (ed.), Language, text and context: Essays in stylistics, 208–224. London: Routledge.
Coleman, Janet. 2008. A history of cant and slang dictionaries. Volume III: 1859–1936. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Diamond, Michael. 2003. Victorian sensation, or the spectacular, the shocking and the scandalous in nineteenth-century Britain. London: Anthem Press.
Hogg, Michael A. 2005. Uncertainty, social identity and ideology. In Shane R. Thye & Edward J. Lawler (eds.), Social identification in groups, 203–229. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
Levenson, Joe. 2001. Inside information: Prisons and the media. Criminal Justice Matters 43(1): 14–15.
Lugo-Ocando, Jairo. 2015. Blaming the victim: How global journalism fails those in poverty. London: Pluto Press.
Martin, James R. & Peter R.R. White. 2005. The language of evaluation: Appraisal in English. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Mayr, Andrea & David Machin. 2012. The language of crime and deviance: An introduction to critical linguistic analysis in media and popular culture. London: Continuum.
Nevala, Minna. 2016. Solidarity in evaluation: The portrayal of victims and criminals in late nineteenth-century newspapers. In Minna Nevala, Ursula Lutzky, Gabriella Mazzon & Carla Suhr (eds.), The rhetoric of character, face and identity construction from early modern to present-day English. Studies in Variation, Contacts and Change in English 17.
Nevala, Minna & Marianna Hintikka. 2009.
Cider-Wenches and High prized Pin-Boxes: Bawdy terminology in 17th- and 18th-century England. In Roderick W. McConchie, Alpo Honkapohja & Jukka Tyrkkö (eds.), Selected proceedings of the 2008 Symposium on New Approaches in English Historical Lexis (HEL-LEX 2), 134–152. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press.
O’Reilly, Carole. 2014. ‘Dirt, death and disease’: Newspaper discourses on public health in the construction of the modern British city. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 15(2): 207–227.
Thompson, Geoffrey & Susan Hunston. 2000. Evaluation: An introduction. In Susan Hunston & Geoffrey Thompson (eds.), Evaluation in text: Authorial stance and the construction of discourse, 1–27. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
White, Peter R.R. 2001. Appraisal outline. [URL]. (31 August 2015)
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Nevala, Minna & Arja Nurmi
2020. Being Wilde. In Late Modern English [Studies in Language Companion Series, 214], ► pp. 315 ff.
Dossena, Marina
2019. The Prince and the Sassenach. In Reference and Identity in Public Discourses [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 306], ► pp. 43 ff.
Nevala, Minna
2019. Two miserable creatures or those atrocious criminals?. In Reference and Identity in Public Discourses [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 306], ► pp. 19 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 7 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
