American Infanticide : Sexism, Science, and the Politics of Sympathy
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
1978833830
ISBN-13
9781978833838
Publisher
Rutgers University Press
Imprint
Rutgers University Press
Country of Manufacture
US
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jul 29th, 2025
Print length
214 Pages
Weight
313 grams
Dimensions
21.60 x 14.00 x 1.80 cms
Product Classification:
True crimeSociety & culture: generalViolence in societyChild abuseGender studies: women
Ksh 10,100.00
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On April 22, 2015, the sorority sisters at Ohio's Muskingum University's Delta house encountered a horrific scene: pools of blood and gore in the first-floor bathroom. No one knew exactly what had happened, but the sisters suspected it had something to do with Emile Weaver. Studious, athletic, and well-liked, Emile had recently started wearing bulky sweatsuits and hiding her midsection, as if she was covering up a sudden weight gain. Could Emile be pregnant? Emboldened by fear, the sorority sisters investigated. In the driveway next to the kitchen door, they found Emile's newborn baby girl dead inside a garbage bag. Emile's crime seemed senseless and left her family and friends with an aching question: what happened? American Infanticide situates Emile's tragic act in a long intellectual, social, and legal history, uncovering disturbing missing chapters in our national history that undercut myths that have shaped public reactions to so-called monster moms and dumpster babies since the colonial era. Ultimately, the book uncovers how bias and inconsistency dictate how women accused of infant homicide are perceived and punished and sheds new light on how and why our legal responses to infanticide are so deeply misguided.
On April 22, 2015, the sorority sisters at Ohio''s Muskingum University''s Delta house encountered a horrific scene: pools of blood and gore in the first-floor bathroom. No one knew exactly what had happened, but the sisters suspected it had something to do with Emile Weaver. Studious, athletic, and well-liked, Emile had recently started wearing bulky sweatsuits and hiding her midsection, as if she was covering up a sudden weight gain. Could Emile be pregnant?
Emboldened by fear, the sorority sisters investigated. In the driveway next to the kitchen door, they found Emile''s newborn baby girl dead inside a garbage bag. Emile''s crime seemed senseless and left her family and friends with an aching question: what happened?
American Infanticide situates Emile''s tragic act in a long intellectual, social, and legal history, uncovering disturbing missing chapters in our national history that undercut myths that have shaped public reactions to so-called monster moms and dumpster babies since the colonial era. Ultimately, the book uncovers how bias and inconsistency dictate how women accused of infant homicide are perceived and punished and sheds new light on how and why our legal responses to infanticide are so deeply misguided.
Emboldened by fear, the sorority sisters investigated. In the driveway next to the kitchen door, they found Emile''s newborn baby girl dead inside a garbage bag. Emile''s crime seemed senseless and left her family and friends with an aching question: what happened?
American Infanticide situates Emile''s tragic act in a long intellectual, social, and legal history, uncovering disturbing missing chapters in our national history that undercut myths that have shaped public reactions to so-called monster moms and dumpster babies since the colonial era. Ultimately, the book uncovers how bias and inconsistency dictate how women accused of infant homicide are perceived and punished and sheds new light on how and why our legal responses to infanticide are so deeply misguided.
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