Measuring immorality : social inquiry and the problem of illegitimacy

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Measuring immorality : social inquiry and the problem of illegitimacy

Gail Reekie

Cambridge University Press, 1998

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p.189-211) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Why do conservative politicians and scholars in Britain, Australia and the United States continue to view rising rates of out-of-wedlock births and teenage pregnancies as a threat to civilised society? This book examines the process by which social science transforms a biological event - a birth - into a social and moral problem. Drawing on Foucault's 'archaeology of knowledge', Reekie stresses the role of statistics and other social-scientific discourses in the emergence of the illegitimacy 'problem' in the early nineteenth century and its continuing cultural significance. The book illustrates the continuity in concerns about illegitimacy, including pressure on the welfare system, fears of racial and intellectual denigration, the detrimental nature of fatherless families, and the association of rising illegitimacy with the supposed selfishness of excessively independent women.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: assessing the problem
  • 1. Bastards and children of the parish
  • 2. Statistics and the birth of a social problem
  • 3. Reproducing at the nation's expense
  • 4. Illegitimate genes and racial inferiority
  • 5. The immorality of the white working class
  • 6. Illegitimate infancy: a deadly risk
  • 7. Offspring of feeble and neurotic minds
  • 8. Fatherless societies go primitive
  • 9. Murphy Brown, feminism and female selfishness
  • 10. The possibilities of a postmodern illegitimacy.

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