ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
05.09.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


In Cold Blood by Truman Capote: Crime, Punishment, and More

Author: Philip Spires Author Ranking Silver | Posted: 15-07-2008 | Comments: 0 | Views: 71 | Rating:  (258) Article Popularity - Blue (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!
Philip Spires

In Cold Blood by Truman Capote was published in 1966, and is based on events that happened almost fifty years ago. The events were real. This is not a work of fiction. The Clutters, an appropriately surnamed Kansas family, have their own complications within their rambling homestead. What family doesn’t? Clutter the father is a farmer. Who isn’t in these parts? Life is not so productive of late. Whose is? The two younger children, a daughter and a son, still live in. The others have left, happily.

 

And then, in November 1959, the four Clutters are found gagged, apart from the mother, all with their throats cut and their brains blown out by shotgun fire. The community is in turmoil. No-one can explain why anyone might have wanted to kill a whole family in Holcomb, a small, poor, rural community in the mid-West Bible belt.

 

Hickock (Hicock) and Smith are two lads on the move. Their families might be dysfunctional. On the other hand they might not. Their socialisation might have been lacking. On the other hand it might not. For whatever reason, individually and collectively they prey on others, prey in a way that renders them culpable, detectable and ultimately punishable. They know thieving is wrong. So, one of them says, we’ve stolen lives, so it must be serious. It was the two of them that pulled the trigger, that blew brains out, that slit throats, that did not quite commit rape. There are limits. And all for forty dollars and a transistor radio.

 

I give nothing of this book away when I reveal that the two lads did commit the murders – exactly how no-one ever admitted – and that, after years of litigious wrangling, both were hanged. The strength of In Cold Blood is not what happens, but how it happens.

 

Truman Capote offers us a vast book in just four sustained chapters, each of which is sub-divided as the narrative shifts between aspects of the different protagonists’ lives. Throughout, the style is much more complex than mere journalism, but the clarity with which it communicates is at times breathtaking. We hear from those directly involved, both victims and perpetrators, their families, the police, the judiciary, the neighbours, the lawyers, the passers-by, the acquaintances, the cellmates. The detail is forensic.

 

It is essential that the reader is constantly reminded that this is not fiction. Truman Capote offers dialogue where a journalist would report, offers interpretation where an historian would defer, offer opinion where an observer might decline. And so In Cold Blood becomes and absorbing, multi-faceted, mid-twentieth century reworking of Crime And Punishment. The crucial difference that the intervening years have generated is that where the latter concentrated on the individual circumstances and motives of the perpetrator, In Cold Blood explores the social and the contextual alongside the psychological.

 

And this is where the book becomes deeply disturbing, because it seems to suggest that the individuality that contemporary society seems to demand of us might itself promote a degree of self-centredness, of selfishness, perhaps, that might give rise to nothing less than contempt for others. In the forty years since the publication of In Cold Blood, it could be argued that such pressures might have increased. Frightening, indeed.

Rate this Article: Current: 5 / 5 stars - 1 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/non-fiction-articles/in-cold-blood-by-truman-capote-crime-punishment-and-more-484192.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

Philip Spires
Author of Mission, an African novel set in Kenya
http://www.philipspires.co.uk
Michael, a missionary priest, has just killed Munyasya. It was an accident, but Mulonzya, a politician, exploits the tragedy for his own ends. Boniface, a church worker, has just lost his child. He did not make it to the hospital in time, possibly because Michael went to the Mission to retrieve a letter from Janet, a teacher, and the priest’s neighbour. It is Munyasya who has the last laugh, however.

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

Xbox Murder
By: Jake Truman | 06/07/2006 | Law
At approximately 1am, six individuals were stabbed and then beaten to their deaths. What in the world could have caused the heartless criminals to violently kill six people and two small dogs? The shocking answer is a Xbox game.

Bullets, Blood, and Glory: an Expose on the Glorification of Real and Fictional Murderers
By: Jordan Eller | 26/02/2008 | Culture
An essay detailing the portrayal of murderers as geniuses, courageous public avengers, and role models.

Case Study: Murder—one Jurisdiction at a Time: the Case of Robert Ben Rhoades
By: The American College of Forensic Examiners | 07/04/2008 | Law
The case of Robert Ben Rhoades serves as an excellent example of the type and nature of case to which Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (VICAP)’s services would provide critical assistance and support. Rhoades is considered one of the most dangerous and notorious serial sex offenders and killers in the United States. Some investigators believe that he is responsible for at least 50, but possibly hundreds, of deaths. However, he has only been convicted of one homicide...

Building A Profitable MLM, Network Marketing Home Business
By: Cheryl Haining | 09/09/2005 | Affiliate Programs
Most of it's fuel at take off. Network marketing

Emotions & The Share Market Equal Disaster
By: Phil Wengier | 31/07/2006 | Investing
Emotions and greed are common in the share market. However if you can overcome the heard mentality you will place yourself in the best possible position to make money.

The Importance of Capital
By: John Nowly | 20/10/2006 | Finance
The following article is an excerpt from the free online course "Using Finance & Accounting in Your Small Business".

Understand the Theory of Money
By: Edward Smithers | 24/06/2007 | Investing
Minimise your risk and maximise your returns! But before you can do this, you need to know the basics. This article introduces the fundamental concepts needed to understand the theory of money.

Opt for a Business Cash Advance Straightaway
By: Alfred Anderson | 05/09/2007 | Finance
If a low credit score, lack of proper collateral or EMIs is all what is bothering you from taking a loan, go for a business cash advance straightaway.

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Non-Fiction Articles

Writing Your Family History and Keeping Yours Alive
By: Patrika Vaughn | 02/09/2008
Digging into your family's past and writing about the people and events you discover can be a fascinating endeavor. A family history also helps children and grandchildren develop a sense of belonging, a feeling of continuity between the generations.

How to Write More
By: Ruth Barringham | 01/09/2008
Being a writer is a job like any other. It has benefits because you can work from home from anywhere in the world and choose your own hours. It has the downside of requiring self-discipline and complete focus to get your work done, and to do it well. The following is advice to help you write more and earn more.

The Time to Become a Successful Writer is Now
By: Ruth Barringham | 01/09/2008
If you want to be a successful writer, you need to act now to turn your dream into a reality. But if you are currently not acting and not working towards becoming a wealthy writer, what’s holding you back? And, more importantly, what can you do about it?

How to Write a Great Introduction in Five Steps
By: K. N. Singer | 31/08/2008
It's easy to write a great introduction if you know how.

A Dying Art
By: http:www.MonogramMecca.com | 30/08/2008
Taking the time to write a letter is a wonderful, beautiful way to show someone you care. Receiving a letter is a meaningful experience. So, lift your finest pen, select your favorite stationery, and sit down for a few minutes of calm and focus. You can create a work of art.

Getting Back on the Writing Horse
By: Mary Anne Hahn | 26/08/2008
Has your writing been stalled lately? Here are a couple of possible reasons for it--and the cure,

In the Lap of the Gods 21
By: Steve Morgan | 25/08/2008
At Wesley College boarding school Steve nearly burns down the cow shed.

Write a How to Book First to Sell Way More
By: Earma Brown | 21/08/2008
Did you know Americans alone spend $8.5 billion a year on how-to and self-help information products and services?

More from Philip Spires

A Walk Up Fifth Avenue by Bernard Levin
By: Philip Spires | 19/08/2008 | Destinations
In A Walk Up Fifth Avenue Bernard Levin offers a British journalist's reflection on the heart of New York City. His outsider's view reveals considers the spectrum of the streets inhabitants, from the down and out to the super rich.

The Door by Magda Szabo
By: Philip Spires | 18/08/2008 | Fiction
The Door by Magda Szabo is a psychological novel about the relationship between two women, a writer and her maid.

Two Weeks Since My Last Confession by Kate Genovese
By: Philip Spires | 18/08/2008 | Fiction
Two Weeks Since My Last Confession by Kate Genovese is a saga of the O'Brien family from Boston. They are a good Catholic family, the father a senator. But drugs, war and abuse take their toll.

Rufus and the Biggest Diamond in the World by Michael Elsmere
By: Philip Spires | 18/08/2008 | Fiction
In Rufus And The Biggest Diamond In The World two boys seek and find treasure in an imagined journey to Solomon's mines and new worlds, where birds talk and words come to life.

Ashes to the Vistula by Bill Copeland
By: Philip Spires | 18/08/2008 | Fiction
Ashes To The Vistula by Bill Copeland is a World War Two novel set in Auschwitz. It's a tale of loyalty amidst the confusion and destruction of war, a loyalty that must pass its untimate test in a surprising, moving way.

Poisoned Petals by Andy Crabb
By: Philip Spires | 18/08/2008 | Fiction
An expatriate British author examines life in Spain. Poisoned Petals by Andy Crabb are short stories with a Spanish flavour, where satisfying justice reigns in the end.

The Spanish Inquisition – an Historical Revision by Henry Kamen
By: Philip Spires | 04/08/2008 | Religion
In The Spanish Inquisition Henry Kamen provides a detailed account of the ideology, processes and consequences of an infamous pursuit of religious purity.

A Gun for Sale by Graham Greene
By: Philip Spires | 04/08/2008 | Literature
A Gun for Sale by Graham Greene is one of his light works, the books he called entertainments rather than novels. As ever with Graham Greene, however, an apparently simple story is interleaved with comment and observation. These may be only vignettes, perhaps, but they make the book a lot more than a simple, linear story.

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below