This book challenges the prevailing historiography of female criminality in nineteenth-century Britain which is currently dominated by stereotypes. In doing so it questions the construction of these and produces a much more nuanced reading of women’s criminality which does not crudely categorize or essentialize their behaviour. This approach has implications for the history of crime, behaviour, and gender in the nineteenth-century history and historiography of other societies. The micro histories in this work challenge conventional perceptions and stereotypes of female criminality created both by male crime historians and historians of gender studies. Every chapter in this new book examines one (or sometimes more) of these assumptions about...
The Victorian era was characterised by a fascination with the criminal’s psyche. In the late 1860s, ...
In the early 18th Century, Daniel Defoe found it natural to write a novel whose heroine was a sexual...
“Skirting the Law: Sensationalism and Spectacle of British Murderesses from the 1830s to the 1860s” ...
This book challenges the prevailing historiography of female criminality in nineteenth-century Brita...
This chapter considers societal discourses about young people, based on historical assumptions conce...
Women as offenders were always considered less interesting to analyze,compared to men and therefore ...
This thesis studies aspects of women's criminal behaviour during the period from 1780-1830, using th...
This thesis explores, and seeks an historical interpretation of, representations of women both as v...
Historians of English crime and criminal justice agree that females are more leniently treated by th...
The history of women and crime is a poorly documented aspect of the lives of Irish women in the nin...
In the last three decades the subject of female criminality has received a great deal of attention. ...
The concept of Woman as Criminal provides the focus for an examination of the treatment of women of...
Law and crime are subjects widely spoken of and written about in public debates as well as in resear...
Historicized research on female habitual criminality provides insight into the interactions and stru...
This chapter consists of a literature review of girls’ and young women’s crime and deviance from a l...
The Victorian era was characterised by a fascination with the criminal’s psyche. In the late 1860s, ...
In the early 18th Century, Daniel Defoe found it natural to write a novel whose heroine was a sexual...
“Skirting the Law: Sensationalism and Spectacle of British Murderesses from the 1830s to the 1860s” ...
This book challenges the prevailing historiography of female criminality in nineteenth-century Brita...
This chapter considers societal discourses about young people, based on historical assumptions conce...
Women as offenders were always considered less interesting to analyze,compared to men and therefore ...
This thesis studies aspects of women's criminal behaviour during the period from 1780-1830, using th...
This thesis explores, and seeks an historical interpretation of, representations of women both as v...
Historians of English crime and criminal justice agree that females are more leniently treated by th...
The history of women and crime is a poorly documented aspect of the lives of Irish women in the nin...
In the last three decades the subject of female criminality has received a great deal of attention. ...
The concept of Woman as Criminal provides the focus for an examination of the treatment of women of...
Law and crime are subjects widely spoken of and written about in public debates as well as in resear...
Historicized research on female habitual criminality provides insight into the interactions and stru...
This chapter consists of a literature review of girls’ and young women’s crime and deviance from a l...
The Victorian era was characterised by a fascination with the criminal’s psyche. In the late 1860s, ...
In the early 18th Century, Daniel Defoe found it natural to write a novel whose heroine was a sexual...
“Skirting the Law: Sensationalism and Spectacle of British Murderesses from the 1830s to the 1860s” ...