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Turning mothers into villains : gaps and silences in media accounts of custody abductions Vivienne Elizabeth

By: Elizabeth, Vivienne.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Feminist Media Studies.Publisher: Taylor & Francis, 2010Subject(s): CONTACT (ACCESS) | ATTITUDES | FAMILY LAW | MEDIA | MOTHERS | SEPARATION | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: Read the abstract In: Feminist Media Studies, 2010, 10(1): 51-67Summary: "This article deconstructs news media representations of two custody abductions that took place in Aotearoa New Zealand in the mid-2000s. In the first case, the father abducted his five-month-old daughter; in the second case, the mother was held responsible for the abduction of her six-year-old son even though he was in the presence of his maternal grandfather. The analysis demonstrates that the media's pejorative construction of the mothers at the center of both cases was facilitated by a number of significant gaps and silences in the narration of the abductions. These silences, in lending support to a fathers' rights construction of custody disputes in which mothers are to blame for dispossessing fathers of their children, reveal the media's reliance on pro-father discourses, particularly fathers' rights discourse." (Author's abstract). Record #5198
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Feminist Media Studies, 2010, 10(1): 51-67

"This article deconstructs news media representations of two custody abductions that took place in Aotearoa New Zealand in the mid-2000s. In the first case, the father abducted his five-month-old daughter; in the second case, the mother was held responsible for the abduction of her six-year-old son even though he was in the presence of his maternal grandfather. The analysis demonstrates that the media's pejorative construction of the mothers at the center of both cases was facilitated by a number of significant gaps and silences in the narration of the abductions. These silences, in lending support to a fathers' rights construction of custody disputes in which mothers are to blame for dispossessing fathers of their children, reveal the media's reliance on pro-father discourses, particularly fathers' rights discourse." (Author's abstract). Record #5198