Well as usual misleading facts and quotes presented by one of her followers
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"Skewering The Ripperologists" Bad Women Podcast- Hallie Rubenhold
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It was I who gave the interview, to put the record straight about her book and the victims, and I certainly never said anything along the lines which you have quoted. so I dont know where you got that from!!!!!!!!!!
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
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Marriott:
I posted the blurb from the source.....that's where I got it from. I didn't invent it. Any problems with the blurb, complain to them.
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In case Ripperologists were unaware of this podcast, I thought I'd share the blurb :
Bad Women: The Ripper Retold, “Dark Annie and the Demon Drink”
Author and historian Hallie Rubenhold’s 2019 book, The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper, won her no fans among the so-called Ripperologists, who have turned the horrific unsolved crimes and penny-dreadful fodder into a cottage industry with books, walking tours, merch, and more — all because Rubenhold dared to humanize the victims and place them in historical context. This podcast, which is based on her book, takes aim at her critics in the first episode, “The Ripper Myth,” and continues throughout to satisfyingly skewer Ripperologists, especially one former officer who seems to think the murder victims at the heart of the case must have done something to warrant their gutting one way or another.
It’s that Victorian-era morality that Rubenhold’s research seeks to upend by exploring every nook and cranny of the lives of the five. As she says at the outset of the series, “Jack the Ripper may have killed these women, but Victorian society was the accomplice.” After spending two episodes with the Ripper’s first known victim, Polly Nichols, Rubenhold moves on to Annie Chapman, who ended up in the Whitechapel neighborhood of London as a result of her struggles with alcoholism. As in previous episodes, Rubenhold supplements her research with carefully chosen expert interviews; here, Dr. Julia Skelly discusses how addiction and specifically alcoholism — and even more specifically alcoholic women — were viewed in Victorian England as well as the disease model of addiction and the temperance movement. —Jenni Miller
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I'm not involved with Ripper research any longer and couldn't care less about Rube even when I was involved, but I was just wondering who this 'former officer' is that is being referred to.......
It isn't possible, is it, that some former officer in the U.K. actually said something along those lines ?
Over and out.
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It has been discussed on Facebook quite a lot. A number of Ripperologists were invited to appear (I wasn't) and all declined, except Trevor Marriott, who apparently gave the performance everyone foresaw. Various observations have been made, for me the interesting one was the blood colour and knife-shaped gash in the promo material. Taken with the subtitle 'Ripper Retold', it was all remarkably ill-chosen for a series ostensibly not about the Ripper at all. No matter how lofty the heights some authors see themselves occupying, the marketing wallahs know a selling tool when they see one and will drag the author down into the gutter, although in this case with no noticeable kicking and screaming.
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Interesting that Rubenhold’s morally lofty acolytes use the gleeful phrase ‘satisfyingly skewering the Ripperologists.’ Perhaps they should take a deep breath and consider the weight of any supposed ‘moral victory’ when only one side of the debate is heard? Refusing to share a platform with those who have an opposing viewpoint…….sounds familiar.Leave a comment:
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I note that the stuff about "skewering Ripperologists" comes from a review on another website. The podcast itself is on a website called Pushkin, which describes itself in very worthy terms. Perhaps it would be worth suggesting to them that in the interests of diversity it would be worth offering a right to reply for the women who took part in Ally's "Petticoat Parley", who feel that it's Rubenhold who is demeaning the victims. Certainly if any named Ripperologist is misrepresented I think it would be worth contacting them. But I don't think I can spare the time to listen to the podcast myself. I did try to read Rubenhold's book ...
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I note that the stuff about "skewering Ripperologists" comes from a review on another website. The podcast itself is on a website called Pushkin, which describes itself in very worthy terms. Perhaps it would be worth suggesting to them that in the interests of diversity it would be worth offering a right to reply for the women who took part in Ally's "Petticoat Parley", who feel that it's Rubenhold who is demeaning the victims. Certainly if any named Ripperologist is misrepresented I think it would be worth contacting them. But I don't think I can spare the time to listen to the podcast myself. I did try to read Rubenhold's book ...Leave a comment:
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I think that there is more than an impression as to the secret policeman's balls' up.Leave a comment:
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I’ve seen this on FB, but haven’t listened to it. I got the impression the former officer might be Trevor.👍 1Leave a comment:
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"Skewering The Ripperologists" Bad Women Podcast- Hallie Rubenhold
In case Ripperologists were unaware of this podcast, I thought I'd share the blurb :
Bad Women: The Ripper Retold, “Dark Annie and the Demon Drink”
Author and historian Hallie Rubenhold’s 2019 book, The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper, won her no fans among the so-called Ripperologists, who have turned the horrific unsolved crimes and penny-dreadful fodder into a cottage industry with books, walking tours, merch, and more — all because Rubenhold dared to humanize the victims and place them in historical context. This podcast, which is based on her book, takes aim at her critics in the first episode, “The Ripper Myth,” and continues throughout to satisfyingly skewer Ripperologists, especially one former officer who seems to think the murder victims at the heart of the case must have done something to warrant their gutting one way or another.
It’s that Victorian-era morality that Rubenhold’s research seeks to upend by exploring every nook and cranny of the lives of the five. As she says at the outset of the series, “Jack the Ripper may have killed these women, but Victorian society was the accomplice.” After spending two episodes with the Ripper’s first known victim, Polly Nichols, Rubenhold moves on to Annie Chapman, who ended up in the Whitechapel neighborhood of London as a result of her struggles with alcoholism. As in previous episodes, Rubenhold supplements her research with carefully chosen expert interviews; here, Dr. Julia Skelly discusses how addiction and specifically alcoholism — and even more specifically alcoholic women — were viewed in Victorian England as well as the disease model of addiction and the temperance movement. —Jenni Miller
************************************************** ************************************************** ******************************************
I'm not involved with Ripper research any longer and couldn't care less about Rube even when I was involved, but I was just wondering who this 'former officer' is that is being referred to.......
It isn't possible, is it, that some former officer in the U.K. actually said something along those lines ?
Over and out.
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