Abstract
This article demonstrates the reconceptualisation of female criminality in interwar British popular culture. It argues that in fiction and the popular press, the period signalled the rise of the strategic female career criminal who challenged traditional gendered patterns of law-breaking, appropriated wider notions of fashionable modernity and transgressed social and geographic boundaries as poorer women embraced new opportunities for masquerade and used crime for upward social mobility. The article shows that the modern female criminal reflected broader shifts and changes in opportunities and roles for women, suggesting that she functions as a prism through which to explore wider debates and anxieties around femininity, 1918–1939.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 73-98 |
Journal | Contemporary British History |
Volume | 30 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 23 Sept 2015 |
Keywords
- Gender, Crime, Interwar, Fiction, Popular Press