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Ripperature: Building the Myth
Gracie Bain
13 episodes
1 week ago
What do you think of when you hear "Jack the Ripper"? In 1888, five women, Polly Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Kelly, were murdered and mutilated in London’s East End. Though scholars debate the validity of this claim, contemporary Victorian newspapers reported the women as sex workers, and that characterization continues today. The Whitechapel Murder narrative is inseparable from sexual violence against women. Jack the Ripper is one of the most famous unsolved mysteries in the Western world and is continually referenced in fiction like “The Whitechapel Murders; Or, An American Detective in London” (1889), television shows like Ripper Street (2012-2016), and other media forms. Ripperature: Building the Myth explores fictional adaptations of Jack the Ripper, or Ripperature. Jack the Ripper, a fictitious moniker for an unknown killer, has been credited as the first modern serial killer and, as such, has lasting impacts on true crime discourse, including the ways gender, labor, and violence intersect. Join me as I attempt to answer the questions: Why do we keep fictionalizing these gruesome crimes? Why are we still obsessed with these crimes? What does our obsession tell us about ourselves? For more information, check out my website: https://graciebain.com/
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What do you think of when you hear "Jack the Ripper"? In 1888, five women, Polly Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Kelly, were murdered and mutilated in London’s East End. Though scholars debate the validity of this claim, contemporary Victorian newspapers reported the women as sex workers, and that characterization continues today. The Whitechapel Murder narrative is inseparable from sexual violence against women. Jack the Ripper is one of the most famous unsolved mysteries in the Western world and is continually referenced in fiction like “The Whitechapel Murders; Or, An American Detective in London” (1889), television shows like Ripper Street (2012-2016), and other media forms. Ripperature: Building the Myth explores fictional adaptations of Jack the Ripper, or Ripperature. Jack the Ripper, a fictitious moniker for an unknown killer, has been credited as the first modern serial killer and, as such, has lasting impacts on true crime discourse, including the ways gender, labor, and violence intersect. Join me as I attempt to answer the questions: Why do we keep fictionalizing these gruesome crimes? Why are we still obsessed with these crimes? What does our obsession tell us about ourselves? For more information, check out my website: https://graciebain.com/
Show more...
Books
Arts,
TV & Film,
True Crime
Episodes (13/13)
Ripperature: Building the Myth
Introduction to Season Two
1 week ago
20 minutes 30 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Ten: Conclusion
1 year ago
16 minutes 39 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Nine: From Hell
1 year ago
57 minutes 34 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Eight: Stalking Jack the Ripper
1 year ago
1 hour 37 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Seven: A Study in Terror
1 year ago
58 minutes 3 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Six: Ripperature Detectives
1 year ago
57 minutes 51 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Five: The Michaelmas Girls
1 year ago
48 minutes 29 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Four: Doctor Jekyll and Sister Hyde
1 year ago
50 minutes 16 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Three: Jill Rips
1 year ago
52 minutes 12 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Check-in
1 year ago
1 minute 29 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Episode Two: Jill the Ripper
1 year ago
56 minutes 50 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Introduction to Ripperature: Building the Myth
2 years ago
47 minutes 50 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
Trailer: Season One
2 years ago
3 minutes 7 seconds

Ripperature: Building the Myth
What do you think of when you hear "Jack the Ripper"? In 1888, five women, Polly Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Kelly, were murdered and mutilated in London’s East End. Though scholars debate the validity of this claim, contemporary Victorian newspapers reported the women as sex workers, and that characterization continues today. The Whitechapel Murder narrative is inseparable from sexual violence against women. Jack the Ripper is one of the most famous unsolved mysteries in the Western world and is continually referenced in fiction like “The Whitechapel Murders; Or, An American Detective in London” (1889), television shows like Ripper Street (2012-2016), and other media forms. Ripperature: Building the Myth explores fictional adaptations of Jack the Ripper, or Ripperature. Jack the Ripper, a fictitious moniker for an unknown killer, has been credited as the first modern serial killer and, as such, has lasting impacts on true crime discourse, including the ways gender, labor, and violence intersect. Join me as I attempt to answer the questions: Why do we keep fictionalizing these gruesome crimes? Why are we still obsessed with these crimes? What does our obsession tell us about ourselves? For more information, check out my website: https://graciebain.com/