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Entertainment
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=== Public punishment === [[File:Ticket for the execution of Jonathan Wild.jpg|thumb|upright=0.7|Ticket for the execution of [[Jonathan Wild]] (1725)]] Although most forms of entertainment have evolved and continued over time, some once-popular forms are no longer as acceptable. For example, during earlier centuries in Europe, watching or participating in the punishment of criminals or social outcasts was an accepted and popular form of entertainment. Many forms of [[public humiliation]] also offered local entertainment in the past. Even capital punishment such as [[hanging]] and [[Decapitation|beheading]], offered to the public as a warning, were also regarded partly as entertainment. Capital punishments that lasted longer, such as [[stoning]] and [[Hanged, drawn and quartered|drawing and quartering]], afforded a greater public spectacle. "A hanging was a carnival that diverted not merely the unemployed but the unemployable. Good bourgeois or curious aristocrats who could afford it watched it from a carriage or rented a room."<ref name=Gay /> Public punishment as entertainment lasted until the 19th century by which time "the awesome event of a public hanging aroused the[ir] loathing of writers and philosophers".<ref name=Gay>{{cite book|author-link=Peter Gay|last=Gay|first=Peter|title=Schnitzler's Century β The making of middle-class culture 1815β1914|year=2002|publisher=W.W. Norton & Co|location=New York; London|isbn=978-0-393-32363-4|page=121}}</ref> Both [[Charles Dickens|Dickens]] and [[William Makepeace Thackeray|Thackeray]] wrote about a hanging in [[Newgate Prison]] in 1840, and "taught an even wider public that executions are obscene entertainments".<ref name=Gay />
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