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Josephine McDonagh, Child Murder and British
Culture, 1720-1900. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2003. xiii + 278pp; illus. (6 halftones). $95.00 (Hdbk; ISBN-10: 0-521-78193-0;
ISBN-13: 978-0-521-78193-0); $32.99 (Pbk.; ISBN-13:978-0-521-05456-0).
Bibliographic Citation: Vallone, Lynne. "On
Josephine McDonagh, Child Murder and British Culture, 1720-1900."
[date of access]. Romantic Circles Reviews 10.1 (2008): 8 pars.
Apr. 2008. <http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/vallone_sp08.html>.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on references
List of abbreviations
Introduction: plots and protagonists
1. Child murder and commercial society in the early eighteenth century
2. 'A Squeeze in the Neck for Bastards': the uncivilised spectacle of
child-killing in the 1770s and 1780s
3. 1798/1803: Martha Ray, the mob, and Malthus's Mistress of the Feast
4. 'Bright and countless everywhere': the New Poor Law and the politics
of prolific reproduction in 1839
5. 'A nation of infanticides': child murder and the national forgetting
in Adam Bede
6. Wragg's daughters: child murder towards the fin de siècle
7. English babies and Irish changelings
Appendix: On the identity of 'Marcus'
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index
Reviewed by
Lynne Vallone
Texas A&M University-College Station
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For Josephine McDonagh, child murder from the eighteenth through
nineteenth centuries—both actual cases and, in particular, the
"idea" of child murder—is an especially sensitive barometer
that reveals cultural values, anxieties and obsessions that change
over time. Through probing and cogent readings of court records, newspaper
articles, novels, poems, political and polemical tracts, medical treatises,
legislation (such as the 1803 Offenses against the Person Act), works
of philosophy and economics, McDonagh's book, Child Murder and
British Culture, 1720-1900, convinces the reader that the
motif of child murder is indeed at the heart of Britain's self-fashioning
and self-imagining. She concludes the introduction: "I
hope to confront and come to terms with the obvious disjunction between
the unnatural and violent deaths of infants . . . —events which
demand our most sober regard—and the extraordinarily potent array
of traces—tragic, grotesque, trenchant, and ludic—which
child murder left in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century culture" (13).
Thus, McDonagh's project must juggle the various and often competing
discussions about child murder, the contexts of these debates, and
the interpretive moments—moments of cultural imagination—that
inhere to the figure of the murdered child. This is a difficult trick,
yet one which McDonagh achieves with panache.
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The first chapter considers Jonathan Swift's "A Modest Proposal"
(1729) and Bernard Mandeville's Fable of the Bees (1714, 1723),
two works that use the figure of child murder to critique commercial
society. Swift uses child death as a bitter indictment of a society
ruled by desire and appetite, while Mandeville sets the murder of
children within his larger discussion of the public benefit of vice.
McDonagh concludes, "For Swift . . . there is a suggestion that
child murder might be a redemptive act, a sacrifice made in the interests
of the renovation of society. . . . For Mandeville, on the other hand,
the joke is that there can be no redemption: modern society is irredeemably
corrupt—but for him, and generations who follow him, that is
its source of profit and its pleasure" (34).
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The 1790s saw a shift in discussions of child murder in Britain, McDonagh
argues, from emotional responses to the deed in (primarily) male spectators,
to the killers themselves (who were typically women). Chapter Three
highlights two key issues of the book as a whole—gender and politics—and
considers the means by which child murder was politicized and the murderers
demonized or sentimentalized. Romantic-era views of women promoted by
writers such as Blake and Wordsworth in their poetry, and Thomas Malthus,
in his Essay on the Principle of Population (1798), informed
both arguments. Malthus's theory about the necessity of poverty, disease
and starvation to check the dire consequences of a geometric growth
in population and an arithmetical growth in subsistence (the work was
revised in 1803 to posit that greed and sexual activity would work as
more acceptable constrictions of population growth), though widely attacked,
also substantially informed nineteenth-century social thinking, affecting
attitudes toward child murder. Wordsworth's poem "The Thorn,"
published in the first edition of Lyrical Ballads, is about Martha
Ray, a jilted and despairing mother who probably kills her child and
who is forever haunted by its loss. The hopeless figure grieving in
nature formed a powerful image often replicated in literature. As McDonagh
notes, "Wordsworth's rendition of the perpetrator of child murder,
in which madness, maternity, and elemental nature are woven together,
becomes a new and pervasive image of pathetic womanhood, and a determinant
in a frequently evoked plot throughout the nineteenth century"
(70). An equally powerful image of the sinister female, often "a
mother without being a wife," was simultaneously advanced. Thus,
McDonagh argues, two figures emerged from the panic of the revolutionary
years of the 1790s: Wordsworth's unmarried and wretched Martha Ray and
Malthus's allegorical "Dame Nature" who functions as both
killer and "moral regulator," disciplining the poor and maintaining
social order through death and a fear of the female.
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Chapter Four considers the role of child murder in the discourse
of radicalism and class warfare as it emerged from debates over The
New Poor Law of 1834, which was based upon Malthusian principles of
reducing the cost of relieving the wants of the poor and encouraging,
through disciplinary measures, their self-reliance. McDonagh also
reviews the furor that surrounded the so-called "Marcus"
pamphlets that advocated limiting poor families to two children and
gassing the "superfluous" children of paupers. Although
the exact purpose and identity of the author of these works from the
1830s and 1840s have not been proved, their significance is emphasized
by the uproar they caused in the popular and radical press. The "Marcus"
pamphlets and the reactions to them, McDonagh relates, "illustrate
vividly the way in which ideas and motifs circulated within the culture,
and were co-opted by different individuals and groups to support widely
different political positions: in this case, child murder is incorporated
in the rhetoric of people of party and opinion as different as the
Tory Radical, Baxter, Chartists of various complexion . . . as well
as the Owenite, Mudie" (112).
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McDonagh's overarching insight—that "the real horror of
child murder comes to exist in the workings of the imagination"
(116)—informs her next chapter on Adam Bede (1859) and
"national forgetting." That the fact of child murder—or
its eradication—could be construed as either a "sign of
a national disorder" or a matter of "patriotic pride"
(124), undergirds this point. George Eliot's novel about a seduced
and abandoned mother unmarried who kills her newborn and is tried
and convicted for the crime, McDonagh argues, contains both ideas;
thus, "child murder is at once the marker of cultural alterity;
but also the redemptive sacrifice" (128). More specifically,
and interestingly, McDonagh considers the murdered child in the mid-Victorian
era to represent, to carry, the "national forgotten" (132).
Like the relation between England and colonial India (whose "proclivity"
to infanticide was reported in the press and widely believed to indicate
the inherent barbarism and immorality of the Indians), the mid-century
disciplinary reforms such as education, sanitation, censuses wrought
upon the lower classes—among which child murder was thought to
be epidemic—positioned the poor as "subaltern" (144).
McDonagh suggests that in Adam Bede child murder functions
as a reminder of the repudiation of orientalism and the violent conflict;
it is "the bearer of memories that have been forgotten for the
perpetuation of the nation" (145).
- McDonagh
concludes her study with
a consideration of Ireland,
an important theme in
the infanticide debates.
Like India's, Ireland's
child murders (or those
perpetrated by Irish immigrants)
confirmed belief in the
primitivism of its people;
however, McDonagh reveals,
by the end of the century,
Irish infanticide was
transformed by Irish writers
from an indicator of degeneracy
to one of noble sacrifice: "If,
in the nineteenth century,
child murder provided
a set of discourses through
which a writer like George
Eliot could negotiate
ideas of British national
belonging, in the 1890s,
the very same discourses
provided the basis for
Irish writers to articulate
a divergent notion of
Irish national independence" (186).
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Though
child murder is certainly
a grisly subject, McDonagh's
book is not sensationalistic
or simplistic in its
arguments. Child
Murder and British Culture,
1720-1900 takes
its place as a worthy
companion to other recent
books about child death:
Pat Jalland's Death
in the Victorian Family (Oxford
University Press, 1996);
and Laurence Lerner's Angels
and Absences: Child
Deaths in the Nineteenth
Century (Vanderbilt
University Press, 1997).
The book will appeal
to those interested
in the Romantic and
Victorian eras, as well
as historians of the
family and cultural
critics more generally.
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Child is a figure that
has historically often
been hard done by: both
literally through abuse
and neglect of varying
degrees, and in ways more
abstruse—though
no less real—through
politicization, objectification,
sentimentalization or
marginalization. In academia,
too, the Child has often
been overlooked or relegated
to specialist volumes
that are often ignored
by Romanticists or Victorianists
who work on canonical
authors and texts. McDonagh,
while less interested
in the actual child victims
than in the ideological
and cultural forces that
surrounded the protean
meanings of child murder,
nevertheless positions
the Child at the center
of cultural and literary
histories of Britain and
simultaneously calls into
question (though never
explicitly) more conventional
histories of British culture
that ignore children and
childhood altogether.
Through her learned and
ingenious book, McDonagh
demonstrates that looking
to the Child—here,
in particular, to child
murder—offers
a particularly well-focused
and informative illumination
of British culture writ
large.
Publisher's
Information
Review published: 20 April 2008.
Romantic
Circles - Reviews -
Josephine McDonagh, Child
Murder and British Culture,
1720-1900.
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