Summary
Over the Threshold is the first in-depth work to explore the topic of intimate violence in the American colonies and the early Republic. The essays examine domestic violence in both urban and frontier environments, between husbands and wives, parents and children, and masters and slaves. This compelling collection puts commonly held notions about intimate violence under strict historical scrutiny, often producing surprising results.
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Over the Threshold is the first in-depth work to explore the topic of intimate violence in the American colonies and the early Republic. The essays examine domestic violence in both urban and frontier environments, between husbands and wives, parents and children, and masters and slaves. This compelling collection puts commonly held notions about intimate violence under strict historical scrutiny, often producing surprising results.
Christine Daniels and Michael V. Kennedy are both Assistant Professors of History at Michigan State University. Professor Daniels has published several articles on labor in early America. Professor Kennedy is co-editor, with William G. Shade, of The World TurnedUpside-Down: Essays on the State of ColonialNorth-American Studies.
Title: Over the Threshold: Intimate Violence in Early America
Author:
ISBN: 9780415918053
Binding:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication Date: 1999-08-17
Number of Pages: 304
Weight: 0.4900 kg
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""""""""Over the Threshold is a fine collections of essays that will appeal to graduate and undergraduate audiences as well as scholars of early American women, crime, sexuality, families and labor. The volume provides a fascinating exploration of the many facets of intimate violence in early America."""""""" -- Journal of SouthernHistory
""""""""The places and time covered, the inventive use of sources, and the rigor with which they are analyzed, make this collection valuable as both academic history and a teaching tool. Together, these essays fill a gap in the early American historiography and set the stage for future studies."""""""" -- Maryland Historical Magazine
""""""""Contributors offer interesting accounts of physical abuse (involving slaves and children, as well as women) in the context of specific locations and times...For its breadth, more unusual subject matter, and readability, Over the Threshhold is the more distinctive [when compared with Understanding Domestic Homicide]."""""""" -- Library Journal
""""""""A fascinating and disturbing collection offering a new angle of vision on relations between men and women in early America. I predict a wide readership for this book."""""""" -- Linda K. Kerber, author of No ConstitutionalRight to be Ladies
""""""""Like the classic study, Albion's Fatal Tree, Over theThreshold combines first-rate scholarship with fascinating reading. Ranging from spousal murders in Northern New England to domestic slave abuses in Mississippi, these essays persuasively show how subtly interwoven were early American social conventions, applications of justice, and the never-ending complications of gender, race, class, and rapid social change. Often as gripping as a novel, this book richly deserves a large and appreciative audience."""""""" -- Bertram Wyatt-Brown, author of Southern Honor: Ethics andBehavior in the Old South
""""""""A first-rate collection on the history of 'intimate violence' in colonial America and the United States from the second half of the seventeenth century to the eve of the Civil War, convincingly demonstrating both the historical context and the nature and patterns of change in the levels of violence over time. The essays, both extremely readable and uniformly of high quality, tell fascinating, often riveting, stories of love, lust and general mayhem."""""""" -- William Shade, author of Democratizing the Old Dominion
""""""""The articles in this anthology cover a wide range of environments, from not so peace-loving Quaker Philadelphia to brutal slave plantations in Jamaica. The authors investigate both patterns familiar to our own times, such as wife and child abuse and infanticide, as well as ones peculiar to those times, such as routine violence directed at servants and slaves. The articles are fresh, eye-opening, and bring to light the extent of routine violence and the extensive communal and legal means available to end it."""""""" -- Elizabeth Pleck, author of Domestic Tyranny: The Making of Social Policy AgainstFamily Violence from Colonial Times to Present
""""""""... particularly compelling."""""""" -- The Journal ofInterdisciplinary History
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