Motherhood, Respectability and Baby-Farming in Victorian and Edwardian London explores a largely obscured marketplace of motherhood that provided ways for women to manage the stigma of illegitimacy and their respectable identities within Victorian and Edwardian society. It focuses on the extent of womenâs âdirty workâ, when maternal problem management was fundamental to the general maintenance of respectability and, by extension, to Empire and Civilisation. Despite its intrigue, history has struggled to understand and represent an uncomfortable but significant artefact of Western modernising society: âbaby-farmingâ. During a period when ideologies of respectability and civilisation arguably mattered most, the ârightâ kind of parenthood â especially motherhood â became paramount. As the âwrongâ offspring could jeopardise a womanâs chances of being respectable, a wholesale, informal, and somewhat clandestine marketplace emerged that catered to various maternal difficulties. Within this marketplace, a pregnancy or newborn child who may have compromised a womanâs respectability could be âdisposedâ of through different means, for a fee. From the Victorian period to the present, the commercialised maternal practices associated with baby-farming have become firmly established within collective consciousness as being synonymous with child murder, female pathology, and âinfanticide for hireâ. This book provides a revised, far more complex, and nuanced narrative history which reveals all that was associated with baby-farming â including all possible outcomes â to be entirely natural, rational, and even necessary products of their time; an understandable outcome of the periodâs âcivilising offensiveâ. Motherhood, Respectability and Baby-Farming in Victorian and Edwardian London will be of great interest to students and scholars of criminology, sociology, history, and gender studies.
Price history
Nov 11, 2022
€47.05