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Blurring reality with fiction: Exploring the stories of women,madness, and infanticide
Authors:Diana Jefferies  Debbie Horsfall  Virginia Schmied
Affiliation:1. School of Nursing and Midwifery, Western Sydney University, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith 2751, Australia;2. School of Social Science and Psychology, Western Sydney University, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith 2751, Australia
Abstract:

Problem

Often, there is a sense of shock and disbelief when a mother murders her child.

Background

Yet, literary texts (plays, poems and novels) contain depictions of women experiencing mental illness or feelings of desperation after childbirth who murder their children.

Aim

To further understand why a woman may harm her child we examine seven literary texts ranging in time and place from fifth century BCE Greece to twenty-first century Australia.

Methods

A textual analysis approach examined how the author positioned the woman in the text, how other characters in the text reacted to the woman before, during, and after the mental illness or infanticide, and how the literary or historical critical literature sees the woman.

Findings

Three important points about the woman's experience were revealed: she is represented as morally ambiguous and becomes marginalised and isolated; she is depicted as murdering or abandoning her child because she is experiencing mental illness and/or she is living in desperate circumstances; and she believes there is no other option.

Conclusion

Literary texts can shed light on socio-psychological struggles women experience and can be used to stimulate discussion by healthcare professionals about the development of preventative or early intervention strategies to identify women at risk.
Keywords:Infanticide  Postnatal psychosis  Childbirth  Stigma  Marginalisation
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