ABSTRACT

This collection of original essays looks at a topic of growing interest and debate in feminist and historical circles: the social regulation of women through law during the 19th and 20th centuries, and the resistance which emerged in response. The collection refutes the notion of women oppressed during the 19th century, unable to act in opposition to the law. When issues of motherhood and women's sexuality became areas of public policy, women began to negotiate the law, as case studies from Europe and the USA show. This book should be of interest to students of women's studies, sociology of law, and social policy.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter |26 pages

Disruptive bodies and unruly sex

The regulation of reproduction and sexuality in the nineteenth century

chapter |25 pages

Child sexual abuse and the regulation of women

Variations on a theme

chapter |19 pages

Producers of legitimacy

Homes for unmarried mothers in the 1950s

chapter |28 pages

Representing childhood

The multiple fathers of the Dionne quintuplets

chapter |19 pages

Whose property?

The double standard of adultery in nineteenth-century law

chapter |21 pages

Mothers as citizens

Feminism, evolutionary theory and the reform of Dutch family law 1870–1910

chapter |20 pages

Humanity or justice?

Wifebeating and the law in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries