ABSTRACT

From media images of "mean girls" to the disproportionate punishment of Black, Latina and/or queer girls in schools and the justice system, female aggression has become a public concern. Scholars, educators, policymakers and parents are scrambling to respond to the perceived upsurge in girls’ bullying, peer pressure, and aggression/violence.

Girls, Aggression and Intersectionality examines how intersecting social identities – such as race, ethnicity, class, sexuality, age, and others - shape media representations of, and criminal justice reactions to, female aggression. The book focuses on three overarching questions: How do race, class, and/or sexuality influence media images of female aggression? How do aggressive girls’ intersecting identities affect law enforcement and criminal justice responses to their aggression? How are diverse groups of girls trying to resist their labelling and criminalization?

Using intersectionality as a conceptual framework, this insightful volume deconstructs a unitary analysis of "female aggression" and transforms the mainstream discourse that paints girls as inherently "mean."

Girls, Aggression and Intersectionality will appeal to undergraduate and postgraduate students, as well as postdoctoral researchers, interested in fields including Gender Studies, Women’s Studies, Youth Studies, Criminology and Media and Culture.

part I|97 pages

Media representations of girls’ aggression and violence

chapter 1|13 pages

Girls and violence

Moral panics and the policing of girlhood

chapter 2|21 pages

Constructing the “bad girls” hype

An intersectional analysis of news media’s depictions of violent girls

chapter 4|18 pages

The female world of love and ritual violence

The Slender Man case and popular news depictions of female adolescent violence

chapter 5|16 pages

The new famous

Deconstructing African American girl fights on social media

part II|88 pages

Criminalization and resistance

chapter 6|21 pages

All the rage

Contextualizing intersectionality and violence in delinquent girls’ lives

chapter 8|21 pages

Inappropriately aggressive and dangerously submissive

Latina girls navigating and resisting racialized sexualization in the New Latino Diaspora

chapter 9|21 pages

A critical view of female bullying and aggression

Pacific Islander girls confront patriarchy, racialization, and imperialism