2019
DOI: 10.1111/1468-0424.12448
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Miserable Kate: Femininity, Space and Literary Conventions in Representations of a Late‐Victorian Murder

Abstract: Kate Marshall was sentenced to death and sent to Newgate to await her execution, which was due on Tuesday, 31 January 1899. Only a few days earlier, the forty-fouryear-old whip maker from Spitalfields, in London's East End, was convicted of the willful murder of her young sister, Elizabeth (Eliza) Roberts, who was stabbed to death in her Dorset Street room on 26 November 1898. Kate protested her innocence, claiming that it was her sister's husband who delivered the fatal blow. Nobody seemed to believe her. She… Show more

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