Kociumbas J
University of Sydney, Australia.
Gend Hist. 2001;13(1):138-60. doi: 10.1111/1468-0424.00219.
Recent historical studies have reconsidered the plight of white women accused of infanticide in Australia, casting new light especially on the motives of single women and mothers of large families. Still unredeemed and largely unanalysed, however, is the baby-farmer. This article explores stereotypes of this bête noire of the nineteenth-century city, addressing concurrent medicalisation of the maternal body, child-birth, infant feeding and foster care. In so doing it also analyses representations of the midwife and the wet-nurse, along with their essentialised opposite, the good mother, who abided by the newly defined "rights of the child".
近期的历史研究重新审视了在澳大利亚被指控犯有杀婴罪的白人女性的困境,尤其为单身女性和大家庭母亲的动机带来了新的解读。然而,婴儿寄养者的情况仍未得到改善,且在很大程度上未被分析。本文探讨了这个19世纪城市中不受欢迎的人物的刻板印象,涉及到产妇身体、分娩、婴儿喂养和寄养护理的同步医学化问题。在此过程中,它还分析了助产士和奶妈形象的呈现,以及与她们相对立的、遵循新定义的“儿童权利”的好母亲形象。