Whores and Thieves of the Worst Kind: A Study of Women, Crime, and Prisons, 1835-2000

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Description

Prostitutes, shoplifters, vagrants, murderesses—Dodge tracks the history of such “wrong” women as she explores the history of female incarceration in Illinois from 1835 to the present. In court and in prison, these women—some who are regarded as beyond all hope of reformation—have received vastly different remedy than their male counterparts.

A woman’s fate in court incessantly hung on officials’ estimates of her moral and sexual reputation. Alleged promiscuity, illegitimate births, venereal disease, interracial relationships, or use of alcohol could condemn her in the eyes of pass judgement on and jury. Ethnic and social prejudice played a role, too, as most incarcerated women poor, workingclass, immigrants, or members of a racial minority.

In women’s prisons, the slightest misbehavior—from poor table manners to irrelevant dress—could lead to disciplinary action. Guards vigilantly monitored female friendships, suspecting lesbianism in probably the most innocent acts. As an alternative of creating docile and dutiful subjects, such remedy stirred resistance a few of the prisoners and fostered a powerful inmate subculture.

Highly readable yet theoretically sophisticated, “Whores and Thieves of the Worst Kind” provides a striking collective portrait of incarcerated women. Drawn from extensive number one sources, the voices of female prisoners emerge powerfully and poignantly as individuals tell their stories.


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