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    "Murderous Mania": Gender and Homicide in Milwaukee Newspapers, 1840-1900

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    Date
    2014-12-01
    Author
    Seitz, Kadie Kroening
    Department
    History
    Advisor(s)
    Rachel I. Buff
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    This study examines the ways in which Milwaukee's newspapers used gender norms to make sense of acts of murder during the nineteenth century. First, women victims of men's violence are examined, particularly through the lenses of ethnicity, class and race. Women victims who did not fit into middle class gender norms were less likely to be portrayed as "beautiful female murder victims." Then, women perpetrators of violence (not exclusively against men) are discussed, including a specific examination of women's use of an insanity defense. Newspaper tropes used to describe women's motivations for filicide are also examined, and found to vary based on the class of the women involved as well as their abilities to fulfill middle class gender norms. Last, the connection between anti-abortion rhetoric and newspaper coverage of Milwaukee infanticides is discussed. This section argues that newspaper rhetoric explicitly denouncing infanticide as equivalent to the murder of adults did not emerge in Milwaukee's newspapers until the mid-1870s, simultaneous to the growth of popular support for the anti-abortion movement.
    Subject
    Gender
    Homicide
    Infanticide
    Milwaukee
    Murder
    Newspaper
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/93982
    Type
    thesis
    Part of
    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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