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Tough-on-Crime Tolerance: The Cultural Criminalization of Bigotry in the Post-Civil Rights Era

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Abstract

This article extends critical scholarship on the problem of hate crimes in the U.S. into the field of cultural criminology. Highlighting the role cultural production plays in reinforcing identity-based social harms, this study analyzes the cultural construction of the figure of the white hate crimes perpetrator, or “the hater.” The article integrates findings from a comprehensive discourse analysis of major U.S. news sources from 1986 to 2010 with insights from the fields of whiteness studies and critical criminology. The study first finds that the figure of the hater embodies modern day bigotry through terse stereotypes about white poverty, masculinity, hate group membership, and criminality. It then argues that these widely distributed discursive performances create rhetorical opportunities to define bigotry as an individualized problem with law enforcement remedies and to further normalize extreme hate crimes cases. Ultimately, a new theoretical construct, “post-difference ideology,” is mobilized to challenge the hater’s prescribed role as folk devil.

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Notes

  1. As part of the Jasper’s racial reconciliation process following Byrd’s murder, the town removed the fence segregating the cemetery.

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Correspondence to Clara S. Lewis.

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Lewis, C.S. Tough-on-Crime Tolerance: The Cultural Criminalization of Bigotry in the Post-Civil Rights Era. Crit Crim 20, 275–292 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-011-9140-1

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