When mothers kill : interviews from prison / Michelle Oberman and Cheryl L. Meyer.
Material type:
TextPublication details: New York : New York University Press, c2008.Description: x, 179 p. ; 24 cmISBN: - 9780814757024 (cl : alk. paper)
- 0814757022 (cl : alk. paper)
- HV 9471 .O34 2008
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
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Storms Research Center Main Collection | HV9471 .O34 2008 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 98634910 |
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| HV 9466 .R34 1985 Partial justice : women in state prisons, 1800-1935 / | HV 9471 .A46 2001 The American prison system / | HV 9471 .L64 2008 Good punishment? : Christian moral practice and U.S. imprisonment / | HV9471 .O34 2008 When mothers kill : interviews from prison / | HV 9471 .W44 2013 Beyond the prison industrial complex : crime and incarceration in the 21st century / | HV 9475 .N716 T46 2016 Blood in the water : the Attica prison uprising of 1971 and its legacy / | HV 9475 .P2 H37 2009 Life without parole : living in prison today / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 161-173) and index.
The saddest stories -- She's the world to me : the mother-daughter relationships described by mothers who committed filicide -- Fighting for love : filicidal mothers and their male partners -- Mothering : hopes, expectations and realities -- Punishment, shame and guilt -- Making sense of the stories -- Interactions with the state : holes in the safety nets -- The end of the story.
From the Publisher: Michelle Oberman and Cheryl L. Meyer don't write for news magazines or prime-time investigative television shows, but the stories they tell hold the same fascination. When Mothers Kill is compelling. In a clear, direct fashion the authors recount what they have learned from interviewing women imprisoned for killing their children. Readers will be shocked and outraged-as much by the violence the women have endured in their own lives as by the violence they engaged in-but they will also be informed and even enlightened. Oberman and Meyer are leading authorities on their subject. Their 2001 book, Mothers Who Kill Their Children, drew from hundreds of newspaper articles as well as from medical and social science journals to propose a comprehensive typology of "maternal filicide." In that same year, driven by a desire to test their typology-and to better understand child-killing women not just as types but as individuals-Oberman and Meyer began interviewing women who had been incarcerated for the crime. After conducting lengthy, face-to-face interviews with forty prison inmates, they returned and selected eight women to speak with at even greater length. This new book begins with these stories, recounted in the matter-of-fact words of the inmates themselves. There are collective themes that emerge from these individual accounts, including histories of relentless interpersonal violence, troubled relationships with parents (particularly with mothers), twisted notions of romantic love, and deep conflicts about motherhood. These themes structure the book's overall narrative, which also includes an insightful examination of the social and institutional systems that have failed these women. Neither the mothers nor the authors offer these stories as excuses for these crimes.
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