Fashioning Adultery
This 2002 book provides a major survey of representations of adultery in later seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century England. Bringing together a wide variety of literary and legal sources - including sermons, pamphlets, plays, diaries, periodicals, trial reports and the records of marital litigation - it documents a growing diversity in perceptions of marital infidelity in this period, against the backdrop of an explosion in print culture and a decline in the judicial regulation of sexual immorality. In general terms the book charts and explains a gradual transformation of ideas about extra-marital sex, whereby the powerfully established religious argument that adultery was universally a sin became increasingly open to challenge. The book charts significant developments in the idiom in which sexually transgressive behaviour was discussed, showing how evolving ideas of civility and social refinement and new thinking about gender difference influenced assessments of immoral behaviour.
- Fills a gap in the study of the sexual and social habits of late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century England
- Provides a major analysis of men's attitudes towards adultery in this period
- Takes a strongly interdisciplinary approach to the subject, drawing on sermons, pamphlets, plays, diaries, periodicals, and trial reports and records
Reviews & endorsements
"...anyone who seeks to study the Enlightenment marriage, divorce, illicit sex, or the class/economics grid of fornication--whether social or literary historian--will benefit from this useful study." Canadian Journal of History
"[Turner] presents in clear, crisp prose a series of tightly argued chapters, each organized around the discussion of a particular source genre...Turner has made an important, original contribution to eighteenth-century studies." William and Mary Quarterly
"Turner has scoured a wide variety of sources dealing with marital breakdown from popular plays and pamphlets to legal treatises and trial records to support his thesis." Renaissance Quarterly
"Turner's book is not only an important contribution to gender studies; it also furthers our understanding of the social history and class relations of eighteenth-century England." History
"An important contribution to our understanding of gender relations within the family. It particularly enhances our sense of men as husbands and lovers during a period that began to see the rising dominance of a middle-class, conjugal, domestic ideal, and provides a valuable addition to the growing historical literature on masculinity." Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies
"...insightful and compelling...." H-Albion (H-Net)
Product details
September 2002Hardback
9780521792448
252 pages
229 × 152 × 17 mm
0.54kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the text
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1. Language, sex and civility
- 2. Marital advice and moral prescription
- 3. Cultures of cuckoldry
- 4. Sex, death and betrayal: adultery and murder
- 5. Sex, proof and suspicion: adultery in the church courts
- 6. Criminal conversation
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index.