1. Public Justice: Legal History and the Cultural Turn, Part 1: Sensible Medias, 2. Fire, Fake News and the Standing Army: Arson and Moral Panics during the Popish Plot, 1678-81, 3. Moral Panic and the Policing of the Mad in Georgian Britain, 4. The Press, the Public and Elizabeth Canning in Mid-Eighteenth-Century London, 5. Character and Custody: The Legal Battle of Dr. Barnardo and Mrs McHugh, Part 2: Emotional Rhetorics and the Law, 6. The Emotional Rhetoric of the Scottish Criminal Indictment, 1660-1780, 7. Conventional and Unconventional Emotions in the Eighteenth-Century English Court of Chancery: The Story of 'Unhappy' Mary Bangs, 8. Bentham's Hyaena: Humour as Formal Critique in Jeremy Bentham's Responses to William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, 9. 'An Attraction of an Intellectual Kind': Amelia Opie's Passion for the Law, Part 3: Legal Selves, 10. Legality, Liberty, and Oppression in Post-Revolutionary England, 1689-1760, 11. Garrow for the Prosecution, 12. Patrick Madan: Avatar of the English Penal Crisis, 13. Sparing the Noose: Death Sentences and the Pardoning of Old Bailey Convicts, 1763-1868