Joseph A. Conforti
Autor von Jonathan Edwards, Religious Tradition, and American Culture
Über den Autor
Joseph A. Conforti is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of American and New England Studies at the University of Southern Maine in Portland. He is the author of several books, including the award-winning Imagining New England: Explorations of Regional Identity from the Pilgrims to the Mid-Twentieth mehr anzeigen Century and Another City upon a Hill, a memoir of growing up in Lizzie Borden's hometown, Fall River, MA. weniger anzeigen
Werke von Joseph A. Conforti
Samuel Hopkins and the New Divinity movement : Calvinism, the Congregational Ministry, and reform in New England… (1981) 38 Exemplare
Imagining New England: Explorations of Regional Identity from the Pilgrims to the Mid-Twentieth Century (2001) 29 Exemplare
Creating Portland: History and Place in Northern New England (Revisiting New England: the New Regionalism) (2005) 29 Exemplare
Lizzie Borden on Trial: Murder, Ethnicity, and Gender (Landmark Law Cases and American Society) (2015) 10 Exemplare
Another City upon a Hill: A New England Memoir (Portuguese in the Americas Series) (2013) 4 Exemplare
Hidden places : Maine writers on coastal villages, mill towns, and the north country (2020) 4 Exemplare
Our heritage 2 Exemplare
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Conforti notes that popular suspicion first fell on a number of immigrants in Fall River. There was a large Portuguese community that worked in the textile mills of "Spindle City" as Fall River was known, and many assumed the "fiend" must have been one of them. The very first suspect arrested was a Russian Jewish peddler seen in the vicinity of the Borden house about the time of the murders. He was soon released for lack of evidence. Many cast a suspicious eye on the Bordens' Irish servant Bridget Sullivan. And the Fall River Police Department, largely composed of Irish American officers, was widely criticized for its alleged hostility to Lizzie Borden and its incompetence.
Lizzie apparently benefited from being a Borden, one of the leading families of Fall River, a woman of solid Yankee stock, a devout Christian (Congregationalist), and a Sunday school teacher and member of the Womens Christian Temperance Union. Conforti argues that her defense played on the belief that it was inconceivable that such a proper and godly lady could commit the ghastly crimes the state charged against her. It worked and she was set free, regardless of all the circumstantial evidence of her guilt.… (mehr)