Lombroso in the Americas
A Transatlantic History of a Controversial Criminologist
Herausgeber: Montaldo, Silvano; Orlandi, Franco; Kilday, Anne-Marie
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Lombroso in the Americas
A Transatlantic History of a Controversial Criminologist
Herausgeber: Montaldo, Silvano; Orlandi, Franco; Kilday, Anne-Marie
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9781350571211
- ISBN-10: 1350571210
- Artikelnr.: 74014075
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Silvano Montaldo is Full Professor of Contemporary History and Academic Director of the Cesare Lombroso Museum of Criminal Anthropology at the University of Turin, Italy. Franco Orlandi is a cultural historian and former fellow of the Research Foundation Flanders, Belgium. He holds a PhD from KU Leuven, Belgium, and the University of Turin, Italy. His research interests centre on the history of criminology, deviance, and the human sciences.
Introduction
Silvano Montaldo and Franco Orlandi (University of Turin
Italy
and KU Leuven
Belgium) Part I: The Criminal Man in the Americas 1. "Like a Literary Whale": The First Journeys of Lombrosian Theories in the United States (1870-1895)
Silvano Montaldo (University of Turin
Italy) 2. The Long Shadow of Lombroso: The Polyvalent Presence in the Birth of Positivist Criminology in Argentina
Máximo Sozzo (National University of Litoral
Argentina) 3. Criminal Anthropology in Chile: Origin
Trajectory
and Circulations
Marco Antonio León (Universidad del Bío-Bío
Chile) 4. The Impact
Uses and Vicissitudes of Lombroso's Theories in Bolivia
Francoise Martinez and Pablo Quisbert (Sorbonne Université
France and Sociedad Boliviana de Historia
Bolivia) 5. The Indian as a "Born Criminal"? Lombroso and the Italian School of Positive Anthropology in Peru (1889-1930)
Gabriella Chiaramonti (University of Padua
Italy) Part II: Criminal Anthropology and Racisms 6. How the Median Occipital Fossa Became Aymara
Maria Teresa Milicia (University of Padua
Italy) 7. Prisons
Laboratories
and Museums: Cesare Lombroso and his Presence in Mexico in the Late Nineteenth Century
Laura Cházaro-García and Gerardo García-Rojas (IPN's Centre for Research and Advanced Studies and Cinvestav-IPN
Mexico) 8. Social Sciences
Jewish Public Opinion and the Jewish Race in the United States of the Progressive Era: American Echoes of Cesare Lombroso's L'antisemitismo 1893-1911
Emanuele D'Antonio (University of Turin
Italy) 9. Imagining Southern Italians as Undesirable Aliens: How North American Social Scientists Adapted
Adopted or Rejected the Views of the "Italian School of Criminology" while Debating Mass Immigration (1890-1924)
Alessandra Lorini (University of Florence
Italy) Part III: Transnational Debates on Art
Prison
Anarchism and Blackness 10. Beautiful Poems and Dirty Literature: Criminological Readings of Mass Culture in South America
Diego Galeano (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro
Brazil) 11. "Exaggerations of the Truth": Cesare Lombroso
Criminology and Anarchism in Argentina
Martín Albornoz (Universidad de San Martín - Conicet
Argentina) 12. What remains? Finding Losses and Retracing Presences: The Misplaced Photographs
Lewis Hine in the Cesare Lombroso Museum of Criminal Anthropology
Nadia Pugliese (University of Turin
Italy) 13. Raimundo Nina Rodrigues
Aurelino Leal
Cesare Lombroso and the Making of a New Ethnographic Sensibility in Bahia
Brazil (1896-1906)
Livio Sansone (Federal University of Bahia
Brazil) 14. Between Social Transgression and Cultural Integration: Following Criminological Traces in the Work of Fernando Ortiz in Cuba
Mario Valero (The Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT)
USA) Part IV: After Lombroso 15. Israel Castellanos and Lombrosian Criminal Anthropology in Cuba
Franco Orlandi (KU Leuven
Belgium) 16. Lombroso and Brazilian Prisons
Viviane Borges and Fernando Salla (State University of Santa Catarina and Violence Studies Center
Brazil) 17. Lombroso's Lasting Legacy in the United States: The Criminology of Women
1920-1970
Mary Gibson (City University of New York
USA) 18. Criminal Somatotypes and Ambivalent Lombrosianism in the United States
c. 1940-1950
John Shepherd (Durham University
UK) 19. The Problematic Gravitation of Cesare Lombroso in the Work of José Ingenieros and in the Journal Archives of Psychiatry and Criminology (Buenos Aires
1902-1913)
Alejandra Mailhé (University of La Plata - Conicet
Argentina)
Silvano Montaldo and Franco Orlandi (University of Turin
Italy
and KU Leuven
Belgium) Part I: The Criminal Man in the Americas 1. "Like a Literary Whale": The First Journeys of Lombrosian Theories in the United States (1870-1895)
Silvano Montaldo (University of Turin
Italy) 2. The Long Shadow of Lombroso: The Polyvalent Presence in the Birth of Positivist Criminology in Argentina
Máximo Sozzo (National University of Litoral
Argentina) 3. Criminal Anthropology in Chile: Origin
Trajectory
and Circulations
Marco Antonio León (Universidad del Bío-Bío
Chile) 4. The Impact
Uses and Vicissitudes of Lombroso's Theories in Bolivia
Francoise Martinez and Pablo Quisbert (Sorbonne Université
France and Sociedad Boliviana de Historia
Bolivia) 5. The Indian as a "Born Criminal"? Lombroso and the Italian School of Positive Anthropology in Peru (1889-1930)
Gabriella Chiaramonti (University of Padua
Italy) Part II: Criminal Anthropology and Racisms 6. How the Median Occipital Fossa Became Aymara
Maria Teresa Milicia (University of Padua
Italy) 7. Prisons
Laboratories
and Museums: Cesare Lombroso and his Presence in Mexico in the Late Nineteenth Century
Laura Cházaro-García and Gerardo García-Rojas (IPN's Centre for Research and Advanced Studies and Cinvestav-IPN
Mexico) 8. Social Sciences
Jewish Public Opinion and the Jewish Race in the United States of the Progressive Era: American Echoes of Cesare Lombroso's L'antisemitismo 1893-1911
Emanuele D'Antonio (University of Turin
Italy) 9. Imagining Southern Italians as Undesirable Aliens: How North American Social Scientists Adapted
Adopted or Rejected the Views of the "Italian School of Criminology" while Debating Mass Immigration (1890-1924)
Alessandra Lorini (University of Florence
Italy) Part III: Transnational Debates on Art
Prison
Anarchism and Blackness 10. Beautiful Poems and Dirty Literature: Criminological Readings of Mass Culture in South America
Diego Galeano (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro
Brazil) 11. "Exaggerations of the Truth": Cesare Lombroso
Criminology and Anarchism in Argentina
Martín Albornoz (Universidad de San Martín - Conicet
Argentina) 12. What remains? Finding Losses and Retracing Presences: The Misplaced Photographs
Lewis Hine in the Cesare Lombroso Museum of Criminal Anthropology
Nadia Pugliese (University of Turin
Italy) 13. Raimundo Nina Rodrigues
Aurelino Leal
Cesare Lombroso and the Making of a New Ethnographic Sensibility in Bahia
Brazil (1896-1906)
Livio Sansone (Federal University of Bahia
Brazil) 14. Between Social Transgression and Cultural Integration: Following Criminological Traces in the Work of Fernando Ortiz in Cuba
Mario Valero (The Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT)
USA) Part IV: After Lombroso 15. Israel Castellanos and Lombrosian Criminal Anthropology in Cuba
Franco Orlandi (KU Leuven
Belgium) 16. Lombroso and Brazilian Prisons
Viviane Borges and Fernando Salla (State University of Santa Catarina and Violence Studies Center
Brazil) 17. Lombroso's Lasting Legacy in the United States: The Criminology of Women
1920-1970
Mary Gibson (City University of New York
USA) 18. Criminal Somatotypes and Ambivalent Lombrosianism in the United States
c. 1940-1950
John Shepherd (Durham University
UK) 19. The Problematic Gravitation of Cesare Lombroso in the Work of José Ingenieros and in the Journal Archives of Psychiatry and Criminology (Buenos Aires
1902-1913)
Alejandra Mailhé (University of La Plata - Conicet
Argentina)
Introduction
Silvano Montaldo and Franco Orlandi (University of Turin
Italy
and KU Leuven
Belgium) Part I: The Criminal Man in the Americas 1. "Like a Literary Whale": The First Journeys of Lombrosian Theories in the United States (1870-1895)
Silvano Montaldo (University of Turin
Italy) 2. The Long Shadow of Lombroso: The Polyvalent Presence in the Birth of Positivist Criminology in Argentina
Máximo Sozzo (National University of Litoral
Argentina) 3. Criminal Anthropology in Chile: Origin
Trajectory
and Circulations
Marco Antonio León (Universidad del Bío-Bío
Chile) 4. The Impact
Uses and Vicissitudes of Lombroso's Theories in Bolivia
Francoise Martinez and Pablo Quisbert (Sorbonne Université
France and Sociedad Boliviana de Historia
Bolivia) 5. The Indian as a "Born Criminal"? Lombroso and the Italian School of Positive Anthropology in Peru (1889-1930)
Gabriella Chiaramonti (University of Padua
Italy) Part II: Criminal Anthropology and Racisms 6. How the Median Occipital Fossa Became Aymara
Maria Teresa Milicia (University of Padua
Italy) 7. Prisons
Laboratories
and Museums: Cesare Lombroso and his Presence in Mexico in the Late Nineteenth Century
Laura Cházaro-García and Gerardo García-Rojas (IPN's Centre for Research and Advanced Studies and Cinvestav-IPN
Mexico) 8. Social Sciences
Jewish Public Opinion and the Jewish Race in the United States of the Progressive Era: American Echoes of Cesare Lombroso's L'antisemitismo 1893-1911
Emanuele D'Antonio (University of Turin
Italy) 9. Imagining Southern Italians as Undesirable Aliens: How North American Social Scientists Adapted
Adopted or Rejected the Views of the "Italian School of Criminology" while Debating Mass Immigration (1890-1924)
Alessandra Lorini (University of Florence
Italy) Part III: Transnational Debates on Art
Prison
Anarchism and Blackness 10. Beautiful Poems and Dirty Literature: Criminological Readings of Mass Culture in South America
Diego Galeano (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro
Brazil) 11. "Exaggerations of the Truth": Cesare Lombroso
Criminology and Anarchism in Argentina
Martín Albornoz (Universidad de San Martín - Conicet
Argentina) 12. What remains? Finding Losses and Retracing Presences: The Misplaced Photographs
Lewis Hine in the Cesare Lombroso Museum of Criminal Anthropology
Nadia Pugliese (University of Turin
Italy) 13. Raimundo Nina Rodrigues
Aurelino Leal
Cesare Lombroso and the Making of a New Ethnographic Sensibility in Bahia
Brazil (1896-1906)
Livio Sansone (Federal University of Bahia
Brazil) 14. Between Social Transgression and Cultural Integration: Following Criminological Traces in the Work of Fernando Ortiz in Cuba
Mario Valero (The Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT)
USA) Part IV: After Lombroso 15. Israel Castellanos and Lombrosian Criminal Anthropology in Cuba
Franco Orlandi (KU Leuven
Belgium) 16. Lombroso and Brazilian Prisons
Viviane Borges and Fernando Salla (State University of Santa Catarina and Violence Studies Center
Brazil) 17. Lombroso's Lasting Legacy in the United States: The Criminology of Women
1920-1970
Mary Gibson (City University of New York
USA) 18. Criminal Somatotypes and Ambivalent Lombrosianism in the United States
c. 1940-1950
John Shepherd (Durham University
UK) 19. The Problematic Gravitation of Cesare Lombroso in the Work of José Ingenieros and in the Journal Archives of Psychiatry and Criminology (Buenos Aires
1902-1913)
Alejandra Mailhé (University of La Plata - Conicet
Argentina)
Silvano Montaldo and Franco Orlandi (University of Turin
Italy
and KU Leuven
Belgium) Part I: The Criminal Man in the Americas 1. "Like a Literary Whale": The First Journeys of Lombrosian Theories in the United States (1870-1895)
Silvano Montaldo (University of Turin
Italy) 2. The Long Shadow of Lombroso: The Polyvalent Presence in the Birth of Positivist Criminology in Argentina
Máximo Sozzo (National University of Litoral
Argentina) 3. Criminal Anthropology in Chile: Origin
Trajectory
and Circulations
Marco Antonio León (Universidad del Bío-Bío
Chile) 4. The Impact
Uses and Vicissitudes of Lombroso's Theories in Bolivia
Francoise Martinez and Pablo Quisbert (Sorbonne Université
France and Sociedad Boliviana de Historia
Bolivia) 5. The Indian as a "Born Criminal"? Lombroso and the Italian School of Positive Anthropology in Peru (1889-1930)
Gabriella Chiaramonti (University of Padua
Italy) Part II: Criminal Anthropology and Racisms 6. How the Median Occipital Fossa Became Aymara
Maria Teresa Milicia (University of Padua
Italy) 7. Prisons
Laboratories
and Museums: Cesare Lombroso and his Presence in Mexico in the Late Nineteenth Century
Laura Cházaro-García and Gerardo García-Rojas (IPN's Centre for Research and Advanced Studies and Cinvestav-IPN
Mexico) 8. Social Sciences
Jewish Public Opinion and the Jewish Race in the United States of the Progressive Era: American Echoes of Cesare Lombroso's L'antisemitismo 1893-1911
Emanuele D'Antonio (University of Turin
Italy) 9. Imagining Southern Italians as Undesirable Aliens: How North American Social Scientists Adapted
Adopted or Rejected the Views of the "Italian School of Criminology" while Debating Mass Immigration (1890-1924)
Alessandra Lorini (University of Florence
Italy) Part III: Transnational Debates on Art
Prison
Anarchism and Blackness 10. Beautiful Poems and Dirty Literature: Criminological Readings of Mass Culture in South America
Diego Galeano (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro
Brazil) 11. "Exaggerations of the Truth": Cesare Lombroso
Criminology and Anarchism in Argentina
Martín Albornoz (Universidad de San Martín - Conicet
Argentina) 12. What remains? Finding Losses and Retracing Presences: The Misplaced Photographs
Lewis Hine in the Cesare Lombroso Museum of Criminal Anthropology
Nadia Pugliese (University of Turin
Italy) 13. Raimundo Nina Rodrigues
Aurelino Leal
Cesare Lombroso and the Making of a New Ethnographic Sensibility in Bahia
Brazil (1896-1906)
Livio Sansone (Federal University of Bahia
Brazil) 14. Between Social Transgression and Cultural Integration: Following Criminological Traces in the Work of Fernando Ortiz in Cuba
Mario Valero (The Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT)
USA) Part IV: After Lombroso 15. Israel Castellanos and Lombrosian Criminal Anthropology in Cuba
Franco Orlandi (KU Leuven
Belgium) 16. Lombroso and Brazilian Prisons
Viviane Borges and Fernando Salla (State University of Santa Catarina and Violence Studies Center
Brazil) 17. Lombroso's Lasting Legacy in the United States: The Criminology of Women
1920-1970
Mary Gibson (City University of New York
USA) 18. Criminal Somatotypes and Ambivalent Lombrosianism in the United States
c. 1940-1950
John Shepherd (Durham University
UK) 19. The Problematic Gravitation of Cesare Lombroso in the Work of José Ingenieros and in the Journal Archives of Psychiatry and Criminology (Buenos Aires
1902-1913)
Alejandra Mailhé (University of La Plata - Conicet
Argentina)







