2015
DOI: 10.7765/9781526102232
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

‘A most diabolical deed’

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
6
0

Year Published

2016
2016
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
3
2

Relationship

1
4

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
references
References 0 publications
0
6
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Research on violent women in an Irish context has particularly focused on the crime of infanticide. Scholarship by this author, Karen Brennan, James Kelly, Dympna McLoughlin and Cliona Rattigan has pointed to the ways that some women who murdered their children were treated by the criminal justice system (Brennan, 2013;Farrell, 2013;Kelly, 1992Kelly, , 2012Kelly, , 2019McLoughlin, 2002;Rattigan, 2012). Despite clear evidence in some cases that infants were violently and deliberately killed rather than passively allowed to die, women accused of infant murder, from the mid-nineteenth century at least, typically elicited sympathy.…”
Section: Women and Violence In Nineteenth-and Early-twentieth-century...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Research on violent women in an Irish context has particularly focused on the crime of infanticide. Scholarship by this author, Karen Brennan, James Kelly, Dympna McLoughlin and Cliona Rattigan has pointed to the ways that some women who murdered their children were treated by the criminal justice system (Brennan, 2013;Farrell, 2013;Kelly, 1992Kelly, , 2012Kelly, , 2019McLoughlin, 2002;Rattigan, 2012). Despite clear evidence in some cases that infants were violently and deliberately killed rather than passively allowed to die, women accused of infant murder, from the mid-nineteenth century at least, typically elicited sympathy.…”
Section: Women and Violence In Nineteenth-and Early-twentieth-century...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historians have mined these records for the light that they shed on individual cases, crimes, or regions (Curley, 1989;Farrell, 2013;Farrell, 2020;Fleming, 2012;Irwin, 1989;Lohan, 1989;Luddy and O'Dowd, 2020;Steiner-Scott, 1997;Vaughan, 2009). They recognise that the sources 'help enormously in the reconstruction of the type of life which led people to commit crimes (Curley, 1989, 82-3) and 'contain some remarkable life-stories (Vaughan, 2009: 307).…”
Section: Women's Voices In the Irish Pastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…30 In Ireland, Farrell shows that the south-eastern counties that 'produced domestic servants for the capital' had the highest rates of infanticide, indicating that women likely returned from Dublin to deal with their unwanted pregnancies. 31 In part, the elevated rates of infanticide among domestic servants represents the vulnerability of these women to the sexual advances of men in their household of employment. 32 Many domestic servants who moved from the countryside to urban areas were isolated, and the 'lack of social networks meant that they had little recourse when faced with rape and mistreatment'.…”
Section: Practising Infanticide: the Women Who Killed Their Infantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 These narratives invariably stress that the woman on trial was of previous "good character" and driven to the crime by events and 2 Because of the separate legal systems of Scotland and Ireland, and after 1922, of Northern Ireland, this chapter focuses specifically on the context of infanticide cases and their representation in England and Wales, rather than attempting a "four nations" approach to its treatment within the United Kingdom. To the best of my knowledge there is regrettably no study at present dedicated entirely to infanticide in Northern Ireland, but there are valuable discussions of infanticide cases in Scotland (Abrams 2002;Kilday 2021: 31-35 and 46-55;Marks and Kumar 1996;Siddons 2014) and Ireland (Brennan 2013(Brennan , 2018a(Brennan , 2018bFarrell 2013;Rattigan 2012) during the period covered here. 3 It should be noted that infanticide emphatically being singled out as a "special case" set aside from expected categories is not limited to the professions of law and medicine, or the press and judicial system, but can appear in potentially surprising forms.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%