A Tribe of Roaring Girls: Crime and Gender in Early Modern England

IF 0.1 0 MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES
Adrienne L. Eastwood
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Scholars who write about early modern women and crime have focused primarily on prostitution and witchcraft which they deem “feminine” crimes. Removing this gender bias by employing a non-essentialist perspective, reveals a more nuanced picture of women’s participation in crime. Women who were unwilling—or perhaps not feminine enough—to use their sexual attributes to make money existed and are reported in crime statistics and literature. Using both hard evidence from crime studies and soft evidence from literary sources, and considering a wide historical range (from 1600–1800), reveals a steady stream of references to masculine-female criminals on the margins of early modern culture. I argue that future crime studies of early modern periods should allow for the consideration of women who did not conform to their culture’s gender ideals. Making a space for the “masculine-female criminal” contributes to a more nuanced view of gender and early modern culture.
《咆哮女孩部落:近代早期英格兰的犯罪与性别
写现代早期妇女和犯罪的学者主要关注卖淫和巫术,他们认为这是“女性”犯罪。通过采用非本质主义的视角消除这种性别偏见,揭示了女性参与犯罪的更微妙的画面。不愿意——或者可能不够女性化——利用自己的性特征赚钱的女性存在,犯罪统计和文献中也有报道。利用犯罪研究的硬证据和文学来源的软证据,并考虑到广泛的历史范围(从1600年到1800年),揭示了早期现代文化边缘对男性女性罪犯的不断提及。我认为,未来对现代早期犯罪的研究应该考虑到那些不符合其文化性别理想的女性。为“男性女性罪犯”创造一个空间,有助于对性别和早期现代文化产生更微妙的看法。
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来源期刊
Explorations in Renaissance Culture
Explorations in Renaissance Culture MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.20
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0.00%
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11
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