As readers
of this blog will have gathered, I enjoy a bit of historical gossip and what
could possibly be more fun than stories about clerics and their alleged sexual peccadilloes?
If you share this rather wayward inquisitiveness, you should really have a look
at Tom Hughes new book, Clerical Errors.
Hughes is
an expert in just such scandals. The
stories he tells are carefully documented, often using sources that have been either
inaccessible or largely untapped. Among
the strengths of his book is his careful analyses of the procedural issues
surrounding cases. He not only lets us
in on what was done, but on what he believes was not done. It presents us with a view of Victorian legal
values and practices which were, at times, “slip-shod” if not biased.
In
addition, since the cases inevitably involve power relationships, Hughes’ book
paints an interesting picture of both the formal and informal structures of both Victorian class and gender.
In this
kind of writing, it would be easy to slip into the error of confusing fact and
opinion. While Hughes offers his
opinion, he is clear in presenting it as just that.
This is
Hughes' third book dealing with what were cases of alleged misconduct on that
part of clergy and is the first in a planned three volume series.
If there is
anyone who knows about British clerical scandals, it is Tom Hughes. He has
spent more than two decades building a database and writing about clerical
errors. All of his books are available through Amazon and the Kindle edition of
Clerical
Errors is available for the very reasonable price of US$5.49.
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