Jeremy Bentham and the origins of the panopticon; "A View of the Hard Labour Bill" and the Penitentiary Act of 1779; John Howard and the origins of the panopticon; the first phase 1786-1793; proposal and contract I; proposal and contract II; the Panopticon Bill of 1794; Hanging Wood and Tothill Fields; a picture of a treasury; the final failure; plans, visions and utopia. Appendix: History of the War Between Jeremy Bentham and George III by One of the Belligerents".
`exemplary book ... It is meticulously researched, lucidly argued
and commendably sane in its conclusions ... The achievement of the
deeply lamented Janet Semple lies in unmasking the paradoxes of
penal reform on the eve of the modern age. Her discerning
scholarship will be sorely missed'
Times Literary Supplement
`old-fashioned history, carefully done, richly detailed, and finely
nuanced ... Bentham's Prison is among the finer of many fine fruits
to come out of the Bentham Project in recent years ... carefully
crafted and well-written book'
History of Political Thought
'This fine book deepens our sense of loss at the author;s untimely
death soon after the book went to press.'
Bhikhu Parekh, University of Hull, Political Studies (1994),
XLII
`Janet Semple ... has done a masterful job of describing Bentham's
meetings with politicians in his 20-year effort to imply his
plans.'
The IARCA Journal
'This fine book deepens our sense of loss at the author's untimely
death soon after the book went to press.'
Bhikhu Parekh, University of Hull, Political Studies, Vol. XLII
`the journey of discovery through the book is entirely a pleasure.
The learning, the elegant prose and the humour of Janet Semple,
create a new and credible portrait of the old man who still sits
stuffed and hatted `perpetually enthroned in his wooden box in the
cloisters of University College, London'.'
Utilitas
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