Marital Violence
An English Family History, 1660–1857
- Author: Elizabeth Foyster, University of Cambridge
- Date Published: August 2005
- availability: Temporarily unavailable - available from TBC
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521619127
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This book exposes the 'hidden' history of marital violence and explores its place in English family life between the Restoration and the mid-nineteenth century. In a time before divorce was easily available and when husbands were popularly believed to have the right to beat their wives, Elizabeth Foyster examines the variety of ways in which men, women and children responded to marital violence. For contemporaries this was an issue that raised central questions about family life: the extent of men's authority over other family members, the limitations of women's property rights, and the problems of access to divorce and child custody. Opinion about the legitimacy of marital violence continued to be divided but by the nineteenth century ideas about what was intolerable or cruel violence had changed significantly. This accessible study will be invaluable reading for anyone interested in gender studies, feminism, social history and family history.
Read more- A groundbreaking study of marital violence from the Restoration to the first Divorce Act
- Provides a historical context for contemporary concerns about domestic abuse and family violence, divorce, and the impact of marital violence on children
- Essential reading for scholars and students in early modern and modern British history, family history, social history and gender studies
Reviews & endorsements
'… Marital Violence is an excellent work, it would grace anybody's library especially if their specialist subject is among the listed ones of gender studies, feminism, social history and family history. I enjoyed reading it and it is worth reading for its own sake.' Open History
See more reviews'As well as revising previous analyses of wife-beating Marital Violence also addresses some of its little-studied and disturbing features … with flair, sympathy and intelligence, Foyster has moved the field far beyond current platitudes and given historians of interpersonal violence, family relationships and gender new avenues of research to explore.' Journal of Continuity and Change
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×Product details
- Date Published: August 2005
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521619127
- length: 296 pages
- dimensions: 228 x 153 x 23 mm
- weight: 0.472kg
- availability: Temporarily unavailable - available from TBC
Table of Contents
1. Rethinking the histories of violence
2. Resisting violence
3. Children and marital violence
4. Beyond conjugal ties and spaces
5. The origins of professional responses.
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