Crime, Violence and Visibility Gendering Understandings of Violence, Disorder and Protest in England and Wales 1784-2010 Routledge SOLON Explorations in Crime and Criminal Justice Histories Series
Auteur : Rowbotham Judith
Though there has been much work on the change in attitudes towards violence since the late eighteenth century, little attention has been paid to the gendered profile of its development or the consequent differential cultural understandings of criminality manifested by men and women, as well as the wider contextualization of violence within society.
This book examines the gendering of violence from the late eighteenth century onwards and reflects on the extent to which gender expectations have continued, into the twentieth century at least, to shape the attitudes of legislators, legal personnel, and the criminal justice process towards types of violence and types of perpetrators of that violence.
1. Gendering Public Society 2. De-Moralising the Economy of the Crowd 3. Criminalising Interpersonal Violence 4.Culturally Convincing the Public 5. Shocking Behaviour - Public Reactions to the Suffragettes 6. Restoring Order, Reinforcing the Law 7. Reacting with Violence 8. Conclusion.
15.6x23.4 cm
Mots-clés :
Criminal Law; Interpersonal Violence; Elias; Foucault; Suffragettes; Female Violence