Motherhood Murder, and the Media: Joanne Hayes and the Kerry Babies Case
chapter
posted on 2023-05-22, 13:25authored byGoc, NE
The discovery of the dead baby’s remains on the rocky shores of the west coast of Ireland in the spring of 1984 was the start of a tragic series of events which would coalesce to create a watershed moment for women in Irish society in what would become forever known as the “Kerry Babies Case.” The complex tale of one young parturient Irish woman, Joanne Hayes, and two dead, newborn babies came at a moment in Irish history when a heated national debate on contraception and abortion was being played out in the Irish parliament and the media, and when questions of garda corruption were at the forefront of public consciousness. This study analyses the media coverage of the case through Ireland’s two major daily newspapers, the Irish Independent and the Irish Press, and Ireland’s major Sunday newspaper The Sunday Independent to expose the ways in which the media created a compelling and prejudicial discourse that maintained a binary framing of the maternal subject as both madonna and whore, a framing which continues to be the preferred way in which the news media make sense of the infanticidal mother.
History
Publication title
Mediating Moms: Mothers in Popular Culture
Editors
E Podnieks
Pagination
125-143
ISBN
978-0-7735-3980-8
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
McGill-Queens University Press
Place of publication
Canada
Extent
20
Rights statement
Copyright 2012 McGill-Queens University Press
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in language, communication and culture