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She Said She Was In The Family Way Pregnancy And Infancy In Modern Ireland Elaine Frances Farrell

  • SKU: BELL-42816350
She Said She Was In The Family Way Pregnancy And Infancy In Modern Ireland Elaine Frances Farrell
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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She Said She Was In The Family Way Pregnancy And Infancy In Modern Ireland Elaine Frances Farrell instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of London Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.29 MB
Pages: 247
Author: Elaine Frances Farrell
ISBN: 9781909646476, 1909646474
Language: English
Year: 2012

Product desciption

She Said She Was In The Family Way Pregnancy And Infancy In Modern Ireland Elaine Frances Farrell by Elaine Frances Farrell 9781909646476, 1909646474 instant download after payment.

'She said she was in the family way' examines the subject of pregnancy and infancy in Ireland from the seventeenth to the twentieth century. It draws on exciting and innovative research by early-career and established academics, and consider topics that have been largely ignored by historians in Ireland. The book makes an important contribution to Irish women’s history, family history, childhood history, social history, crime history and medical history, and will provide a reference point for academics interested in themes of sexuality, childbirth, infanthood and parenthood.

  • I. ‘I WOULD TAKE ANYTHING TO PREVENT ME HAVING A CHILD'

  • 1. ‘Veiled obscenity’: contraception and the Dublin Medical Press, 1850–1900
    Ann Daly


  • 2. ‘Its effect on public morality is vicious in the extreme’: defining birth control as obscene and unethical, 1926–32
    Sandra McAvoy



  • II: 'INEXPRESSIBLE RENDINGS OF HEART AT THE PROSPECT OF MY CHILD'S DEATH'

  • 3. Some sources for the study of infant and maternal mortality in later seventeenth-century Ireland
    Clodagh Tait


  • 4. ‘A time of trial being near at hand’: pregnancy, childbirth
    and parenting in the spiritual journal of Elizabeth Bennis, 1749–79
    Rosemary Raughter


  • 5. Birth and death in nineteenth-century Dublin’s lying-in hospitals
    Julia Anne Bergin



  • III: 'THE NATURAL AND PROPER GUARDIAN OF THE CHILD'

  • 6. Medicinal care in the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Irish home
    Emma O’Toole


  • 7. The chrysalis in the cradle
    Elaine Murray



  • IV: 'THE WORLD ACTED UNJUSTLY TO WOMEN IN THIS FALLEN POSITION'

  • 8. ‘Found in a “dying” condition’: nurse-children in Ireland, 1872–1952
    Sarah-Anne Buckley

  • 9. In the family way and away from the family: examining the evidence for Irish unmarried mothers in Britain, 1920s–40s
    Jennifer Redmond



  • V: 'I KNOW SHE NEVER INTENDED TO REAR IT'

  • 10. Responding to infanticide in Ireland, 1680–1820
    James Kelly


  • 11. ‘A very immoral establishment’: the crime of infanticide and class status in Ireland, 1850–1900
    Elaine Farrell


  • 12. Beyond cradle and grave: Irish folklore about the spirits
    of unbaptized infants and the spirits of women who murdered babies
    Anne O’Connor

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