Despite mainstream
criminology’s burgeoning interest in issues of race, class, and gender, very
little scholarship has examined whiteness and its attendant privileges in
understanding public discourse on criminal offenders.
This paper examines the
role of penal spectatorship as a discursive mechanism by which white, female
offenders are protected in public spaces by virtue of their racial and gender
identity. Using a content analysis of comments posted on the mug shot images of
white women on a popular ‘mug shot website,’ we find that these women are
viewed as victims of circumstance deserving of empathy and redemption rather
than as criminals. We offer ‘white protectionism’ as a means by which whites
extend privilege and protection to other whites who transverse the boundaries
of whiteness through criminality to guard against ‘deviant’ or ‘criminal’
designations.
These findings add to our understandings of penal spectatorship
as yet another tool of white supremacy operating in the Post-Civil Rights era
of mass incarceration.
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By: Danielle Dirksa**, Caroline Heldmanb & Emma Zackc
- a Department of Sociology, Occidental College, 1600 Campus Road, M-26, Los Angeles, CA 90041, USA
- b Department of Politics, Occidental College, 1600 Campus Road, Los Angeles, CA 90041, USA
- c Department of Sociology, Occidental College, Los Angeles, CA, USA
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