ABSTRACT

Between Poverty and the Pyre examines the history of the experience of widowhood across different cultures. It brings together a collection of essays by historians, anthropologists and philologists. The book shows how difficult it is to define the 'typical' widow, as the experiences of these women have differed so widely, not simply because of their different time periods and locations, but also becuase of their varying legal and religious status and economic conditions.
The study is diverse with subjects ranging from:
*Hindu wives who followed their husbands to the pyre
*widows who were burned as witches
*and widows who had to become prostitutes to stay alive.
The book also explores Jesus's interest in widows and the experience of some well-known widows, such as Mohammed's first wife.

chapter 1|18 pages

WIDOWS’ WORLDS

Representations and realities

chapter 3|27 pages

PAUPER OR PATRONESS

The widow in the Early Christian Church

chapter 4|31 pages

WIDOWS IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND

chapter 5|28 pages

WIDOWS AND THE LAW

The legal position of widows in the Dutch Republic during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries

chapter 6|19 pages

‘EUROPEAN’ WIDOWS IN THE DUTCH EAST INDIES

Their legal and social position

chapter 7|30 pages

WOMEN WITHOUT MEN

Widows and spinsters in Britain and France in the eighteenth century

chapter 9|33 pages

THE ULTIMATE JOURNEY

Sati and widowhood in India

chapter 10|26 pages

WIDOWS IN ISLAM

chapter 11|17 pages

WIDOWS HIDDEN FROM VIEW

The disappearance of mourning dress among Dutch widows in the twentieth century

chapter 12|5 pages

WIDOWS IN WESTERN HISTORY

A select bibliography