Front cover image for Child murder and British culture, 1720-1900

Child murder and British culture, 1720-1900

"Josephine McDonagh examines the idea of child murder in British culture in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Analysing texts drawn from economics, philosophy, law, and medicine as well as from literature, McDonagh highlights the manifold ways in which child murder echoes and reverberates in a variety of cultural debates and social practices. She places literary works within social, political, and cultural contexts, including debates on luxury, penal reform campaigns, slavery, the treatment of the poor, and birth control, tracing a trajectory from Swift's A Modest Proposal through to the debates on the New Woman at the turn of the twentieth century by way of Burke, Wordsworth, Wollstonecraft, George Eliot, George Egerton, and Thomas Hardy, among others. McDonagh demonstrates the haunting persistence of the notion of child murder within British culture in a volume that will be of interest to cultural and literary scholars alike."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2003
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2003
Criticism, interpretation, etc
xiii, 278 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780521781930, 0521781930
51810507
Child murder and commercial society in the early eighteenth century
'A squeeze in the neck for bastards': the uncivilised spectacle of child-killing in the 1770s and 1780s
1789/1803: Martha Ray, the mob, and Malthus' mistress of the feast
'Bright and countless everywhere': the new poor law and the politics of prolific reproduction in 1839
'A nation of infanticides': child murder and the national forgetting in Adam Bede
Wragg's daughters: child murder towards the Fin-de-Sic̈le
English babies and Irish changelings