Deena A. Isom is an Associate Professor of African American Studies and Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of South Carolina. Her research aims to bring marginalized voices and lived experiences center to the understandings of the causes and consequences of negative and harmful behaviors and entanglement with the criminal legal system through the advancement of criminological theory, critical perspectives, and intersectional methodologies. Her work has appeared in numerous outlets such as the Race and Justice, Feminist Criminology, Critical Sociology, Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Social Science & Medicine, and Youth & Society. She is a University of South Carolina McCausland Fellow and Garnet Apple Award recipient as well as an Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Minorities and Women Section’s Becky Tatum Excellence in Scholarship Awardee.
"""At the right time, Isom’s work delivers a rich socio-historic critique of the political shifts that we are witnessing today. Gratuitous Angst in White America is relevant, unapologetically brave, historically grounded, and feisty in its analysis and that is needed now more than ever."" Dr. Zoe Spencer, Emmy Award Winning Poet, Author, and Scholar""This book fills a major gap in the literature by examining the role that whiteness, particularly white privilege and the myth of white supremacy, plays in explaining crime among whites. It is notable for the background information it provides, the many literatures on which it draws, the intersectional approach it takes, and its de- scription of the mechanisms by which whiteness causes crime. The book will stimulate much debate and research, taking criminology in a much needed direction."" Dr. Robert Agnew, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Sociology, Emeritus, Emory University""By offering an innovative analysis of white people’s privileged pathways to crime and their privileged exemption from the purview of criminal law, Deena Isom makes one of the most important contributions to a critical criminological understanding of the complex relationship between race/ethnicity, crime, and social control in this current era. It is a tour de force, one that will undoubtedly become a classic piece of intersectionality scholarship. Theoretically sophisticated, Isom’s path-breaking offering is a must-read for scholars, activists, practitioners, policymakers, and students seeking a timely, progressive, and un- varnished focus on race, justice, and inequality."" Dr. Walter S. DeKeseredy, Anna Deane Carlson Endowed Chair of Social Sciences, Director of the Research Center on Violence, and Professor of Sociology, West Virginia University""In this book, Dr. Deena Isom has trained her analytical sights upon troubling questions about racial justice. With an unflinching scholarly candor, she asks how it is possible to harness the explanatory lenses and tools of feminist intersectionality theory and critical race theory (among other frameworks) so to understand why the early 21st century witnessed the re-emergence of white nationalist/supremacist rationales for a more punitive American criminal justice system. Readers will be impressed with the breadth of the events and scholarly literature Dr. Isom includes in her cogent argument as to how white racial angst is at the heart of contemporary racist rhetoric, ideals, and policies."" Dr. Todd Shaw, Distinguished Associate Professor of Political Science and African American Studies, University of South Carolina"