Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres”

This essay uses the 1950 “case of the clinking brassieres” to explore female theft in Miami at mid-century and the ways in which gender, race, class, respectability, and youth offered protections and shaped treatment within Florida’s criminal justice system. It focuses on the illegal activities of t...

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Main Author: Miller, Vivien
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: 2010
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2184/
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author Miller, Vivien
author_facet Miller, Vivien
author_sort Miller, Vivien
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This essay uses the 1950 “case of the clinking brassieres” to explore female theft in Miami at mid-century and the ways in which gender, race, class, respectability, and youth offered protections and shaped treatment within Florida’s criminal justice system. It focuses on the illegal activities of three female telephone employees, their criminal prosecution, and post-conviction relief. These seemingly respectable coin thieves challenged a familiar image of theft as a lower-class crime associated with poverty and economic need, while their blonde hair and white skin (and an idealization of the meanings of white beauty standards), complicated public attitudes in a period when “true” or serious criminals were racketeers and organised crime operatives.
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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spelling nottingham-21842020-05-04T20:25:39Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2184/ Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres” Miller, Vivien This essay uses the 1950 “case of the clinking brassieres” to explore female theft in Miami at mid-century and the ways in which gender, race, class, respectability, and youth offered protections and shaped treatment within Florida’s criminal justice system. It focuses on the illegal activities of three female telephone employees, their criminal prosecution, and post-conviction relief. These seemingly respectable coin thieves challenged a familiar image of theft as a lower-class crime associated with poverty and economic need, while their blonde hair and white skin (and an idealization of the meanings of white beauty standards), complicated public attitudes in a period when “true” or serious criminals were racketeers and organised crime operatives. 2010 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed Miller, Vivien (2010) Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres”. In: European Social Science History Conference, April 2010, Ghent, Belgium. (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Miller, Vivien
Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres”
title Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres”
title_full Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres”
title_fullStr Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres”
title_full_unstemmed Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres”
title_short Respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in Miami’s “Case of the Clinking Brassieres”
title_sort respectable white ladies, wayward girls, and telephone thieves in miami’s “case of the clinking brassieres”
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2184/