Female crime  

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“Women are Furies, Amazons, Semiramis, Joans of Arc, Jeanne Hachettes, Judith, Charlotte Cordays, Cleopatras, Messalinas.”--"Manifesto of Futurist Woman" (1912) by Valentine de Saint-Point


"Female cruelty [is] always more active than male, by reason of the excessive sensibility of women's organs.”--Philosophy in the Bedroom (1795) by Marquis de Sade

Salome (c. 1530) by Lucas Cranach the Elder
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Salome (c. 1530) by Lucas Cranach the Elder

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Gender is a factor that plays a role in both human and animal aggression. Males are generally more aggressive than females (Coi & Dodge 1997, Maccoby & Jacklin 1974), and men commit the vast majority of murders (Buss 2005). This is one of the most robust and reliable behavioral sex differences, and it has been found across many different age groups and cultures. There is evidence that males are quicker to aggression (Frey et al 2003) and more likely than females to express their aggression physically (Bjorkqvist et al. 1994). However, some researchers have suggested that females are not necessarily less aggressive, but that they tend to show their aggression in less overt, less physical ways (Bjorkqvist et al. 1994, Hines and Saudino 2003). For example, females may display more verbal and relational aggression, such as social rejection.

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Biblical

Yael kills Sisera, Judith decapitates Holofernes, Salome has John the Baptist decapitated by her father Herod II.

In fiction: the femme fatale trope

femme fatale, Lady Macbeth

A femme fatale (plural: femmes fatales) is an alluring and seductive woman whose charms ensnare her lovers in bonds of irresistible desire, often leading them into compromising, dangerous and deadly situations. She is an archetypal character of literature and art.

Archetypes of bad women

Female murderers

Female murders are rare but greatly attract the popular imagination, the popular press likes to refer to them as black widows. There are few cases of female serial killers and a couple of examples of warrior women.

Examples

Women and poison

Visha Kanya, Lucrezia Borgia, Catherine de Medici, Aqua Tofana, Affair of the Poisons, Madeleine Smith, Florence Harding, The Angel Makers of Nagyrév

The reason poison has been popular as modus operandi in murder by women is that women are a) physically not as strong as men and cannot kill for example with their bare hands and b) women are the traditional caregivers who are by definition close to their victims, making it easy to for example gradually poison them. The shift from home to hospital care for the sick changed in the 19th century and poisoning became less popular.

References

See also

sex differences in crime




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Female crime" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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