Dr. Donna Cooper Graves is Associate Professor at the University of Tennessee – Martin, where she teaches courses in women’s history, public history, and social history. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Kansas. Dr. Graves’ published articles include “We’ll Fight it Out Fair Right Now”: Homicide, Felony Assault, and Gender in Kansas City, Kansas, 1890-1920,” in Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains (2003), and “Subject as Audience: The Politics of Public Exhibits on Women” (with Carol Green) in Gender and History (1994).
2010 0-7734-1402-9 This book includes 166 articles discussing specific issues related to infanticide.
Each is cross-referenced with related articles. The volume also contains an extensive
bibliography.
2006 0-7734-5761-5 Awarded the Adele Mellen Prize for Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship
This book contains a collection of twelve essays about the practice of infanticide in different parts of the world and written by women from different academic disciplines, with an introductory chapter that analyzes the origins and development of scholarship on this topic. The book’s essays are divided into four parts that open with brief introductions. Two of these sections are based on common themes of infanticide, and the other two on the applications of similar methodologies.
Part one contains essays that highlight the persistence of race and inequality in shaping the context of infanticide in such diverse terrains as the Caribbean, Australia, and the American South. The second section demonstrates how governments in England, Canada, and the Soviet Union used their authority to control women’s behavior by instituting policies they thought would deter women from committing infanticide. The last two sections contain a variety of essays about infanticide in Africa and the Americas, but are similar in applying the case study method of analysis. The final part demonstrates the effectiveness of using sex ratios and computer data analysis to study infanticide in Asia and western Europe. The book concludes with a lengthy, multidisciplinary bibliography of the infanticide literature.