Neither Angels nor Demons: Women, Crime, and Victimization
She is a victim of intimate partner violence, a woman who has been harmed. She is a criminal offender, a woman who has harmed others. Superficially, it seems she is two separate women.

“Victim” and “offender” are binary categories used within law, social science, and public discourse to describe social experiences with a moral dimension. Such terms draw upon cultural narratives of good and bad people and have influenced scholarship, public policy, and activism. The duality of “good” and “bad” women, separated into mutually exclusive extremes of angels and demons, has helped segregate thinking about, and responses to, each group.

In this groundbreaking study, Kathleen J. Ferraro exposes the limits of such thinking by exploring the link between victimization and offending from the perspective of the women charged with the crimes. Interviewing forty-five women charged with criminal offenses (more than half of whom killed their abusers; the others participated in a range of violent crimes related to domestic violence), Ferraro uses their stories to illuminate complex interactions with violent partners, their children, and the legal system. She shows that these women are neither stereotypical angels nor demons, but rather human beings whose complicated lives belie the abstract categorizations of researchers, legal advocates, and the criminal justice system.

Ferraro begins with a general discussion of blurred boundaries and the complexity of experience, and moves from there to discuss women’s interactions with the criminal processing system. In the course of her study, she reexamines, and finds wanting, many standard ways of evaluating women’s violent behavior, including “mutual combat,” “battered woman syndrome,” and “cycle of violence.” She argues that a more complex, nuanced understanding of intimate partner violence and how it contributes to women’s offending will contribute to public policy less focused on control and accountability of individuals than on developing social conditions that promote everyone’s safety and well-being and foster a sense of hope.
1116763960
Neither Angels nor Demons: Women, Crime, and Victimization
She is a victim of intimate partner violence, a woman who has been harmed. She is a criminal offender, a woman who has harmed others. Superficially, it seems she is two separate women.

“Victim” and “offender” are binary categories used within law, social science, and public discourse to describe social experiences with a moral dimension. Such terms draw upon cultural narratives of good and bad people and have influenced scholarship, public policy, and activism. The duality of “good” and “bad” women, separated into mutually exclusive extremes of angels and demons, has helped segregate thinking about, and responses to, each group.

In this groundbreaking study, Kathleen J. Ferraro exposes the limits of such thinking by exploring the link between victimization and offending from the perspective of the women charged with the crimes. Interviewing forty-five women charged with criminal offenses (more than half of whom killed their abusers; the others participated in a range of violent crimes related to domestic violence), Ferraro uses their stories to illuminate complex interactions with violent partners, their children, and the legal system. She shows that these women are neither stereotypical angels nor demons, but rather human beings whose complicated lives belie the abstract categorizations of researchers, legal advocates, and the criminal justice system.

Ferraro begins with a general discussion of blurred boundaries and the complexity of experience, and moves from there to discuss women’s interactions with the criminal processing system. In the course of her study, she reexamines, and finds wanting, many standard ways of evaluating women’s violent behavior, including “mutual combat,” “battered woman syndrome,” and “cycle of violence.” She argues that a more complex, nuanced understanding of intimate partner violence and how it contributes to women’s offending will contribute to public policy less focused on control and accountability of individuals than on developing social conditions that promote everyone’s safety and well-being and foster a sense of hope.
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Neither Angels nor Demons: Women, Crime, and Victimization

Neither Angels nor Demons: Women, Crime, and Victimization

by Kathleen Ferraro
Neither Angels nor Demons: Women, Crime, and Victimization

Neither Angels nor Demons: Women, Crime, and Victimization

by Kathleen Ferraro

eBook

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Overview

She is a victim of intimate partner violence, a woman who has been harmed. She is a criminal offender, a woman who has harmed others. Superficially, it seems she is two separate women.

“Victim” and “offender” are binary categories used within law, social science, and public discourse to describe social experiences with a moral dimension. Such terms draw upon cultural narratives of good and bad people and have influenced scholarship, public policy, and activism. The duality of “good” and “bad” women, separated into mutually exclusive extremes of angels and demons, has helped segregate thinking about, and responses to, each group.

In this groundbreaking study, Kathleen J. Ferraro exposes the limits of such thinking by exploring the link between victimization and offending from the perspective of the women charged with the crimes. Interviewing forty-five women charged with criminal offenses (more than half of whom killed their abusers; the others participated in a range of violent crimes related to domestic violence), Ferraro uses their stories to illuminate complex interactions with violent partners, their children, and the legal system. She shows that these women are neither stereotypical angels nor demons, but rather human beings whose complicated lives belie the abstract categorizations of researchers, legal advocates, and the criminal justice system.

Ferraro begins with a general discussion of blurred boundaries and the complexity of experience, and moves from there to discuss women’s interactions with the criminal processing system. In the course of her study, she reexamines, and finds wanting, many standard ways of evaluating women’s violent behavior, including “mutual combat,” “battered woman syndrome,” and “cycle of violence.” She argues that a more complex, nuanced understanding of intimate partner violence and how it contributes to women’s offending will contribute to public policy less focused on control and accountability of individuals than on developing social conditions that promote everyone’s safety and well-being and foster a sense of hope.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781555538606
Publisher: Northeastern University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2015
Series: Northeastern Series on Gender, Crime, and Law
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 344
Sales rank: 316,548
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

KATHLEEN J. FERRARO is Professor of Sociology at Northern Arizona University. A respected authority in the field, she has worked closely with battered women as an active participant in the anti-violence against women movement.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Blurred Boundaries and the Complexities of Experience
Irreconcilable Differences: Women’s Encounters with the Criminal Processing System
Negotiating Surreality
The Social Reproduction of Women’s Pain
Demonic Angels?: Violence against Abusers
Angelic Demons?: Crimes of Complicity
Epilogue
appendixes
Pseudonym, Race/Ethnicity, Charges, Relationship to Victim(s), and Role in Offense
Abuse of Drugs and Alcohol
Women Who Killed Their Husbands/Partners
Context of Violence against Husbands/Partners
Prior Police Involvement, Children, Work, Abused as Child, and Parental Absence
Women Who Committed Crimes against Others
A Note on Method
Notes
References
Index

What People are Saying About This

James Ptacek

“This brilliant analysis connects women’s victimization with women’s offending in ways that reveal the complexity of a deeply divided society. This book is unusual for its emphasis on how class inequality, racism, and colonialism interact with patriarchy and contribute to victimization. This is a provocative and heartbreaking book that will inspire new thinking about violence of many kinds.”

Betsy Stanko

"A compelling read. Few understand violence against women as deeply as Kathleen Ferraro. Neither Angels nor Demons exposes the pain, the ambivalence, the 'making sense' of living with violence. Ferraro challenges us all to begin to think outside of the criminal processing box, and inside a world that must imagine nonviolence."
Betsy Stanko, Senior Advisor, London Metropolitan Police and Royal Holloway, University of London, author of Intimate Intrusions and Everyday Violence.

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