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Leader |
LDR
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cam i 00 |
Control # |
1
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2019020154 |
Control # Id |
3
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DLC |
Date |
5
|
|
20210109105722.0 |
Fixed Data |
8
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190718s2019 paua b 001 0 eng c |
LC Card |
10
|
|
$a 2019020154 |
ISBN |
20
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|
$a9780812251555$q(hardcover) |
Obsolete |
39
|
|
$a325882$cTLC |
Cat. Source |
40
|
|
$aPU$beng$cPU$erda$dDLC |
Authen. Ctr. |
42
|
|
$apcc |
Geog. Area |
43
|
|
$an-us--- |
LC Call |
50
|
00 |
$aHQ806$b.F38 2019 |
Dewey Class |
82
|
00 |
$a306.73/6$223 |
ME:Pers Name |
100
|
1 |
$aFaulkner, Carol,$eauthor. |
Title |
245
|
10 |
$aUnfaithful :$blove, adultery, and marriage reform in nineteenth-century America /$cCarol Faulkner. |
Tag 264 |
264
|
1 |
$aPhiladelphia :$bUniversity of Pennsylvania Press,$c[2019] |
Phys Descrpt |
300
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$a215 pages :$billustrations ;$c24 cm. |
Tag 336 |
336
|
|
$atext$btxt$2rdacontent |
Tag 337 |
337
|
|
$aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia |
Tag 338 |
338
|
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$avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier |
Series:Diff |
490
|
1 |
$aHaney Foundation series |
Note:Bibliog |
504
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$aIncludes bibliographical references and index. |
Note:Content |
505
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0 |
$aIntroduction: The adultery metaphor -- Adultery as a sin and a crime -- Adultery as freedom from sin -- "Two kinds of adultery" -- "Legalized adultery" -- True vs. false marriage -- "His adultery is proved so clear" -- Adultery among the free lovers -- Feminists and the marriage question -- Adultery as social protest -- Adultery as civil disobedience -- Epilogue. |
Abstract |
520
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|
$a"Between 1830 and 1880, an array of activists viewed the legal, social, and cultural institution of marriage as an obstacle to a more equitable society. Early feminists identified the question of marital rights as equally important to political rights. Other reformers deemed the marriage question more fundamental to the transformation of women's status. The most radical activists, known as free lovers, demanded an end to the constraints of legal marriage. They argued that individuals had a right to choose when and whom they loved, advocating a form of serial monogamy. More moderate marriage reformers, including women's rights activists and spiritualists, believed that love, choice, and happiness were essential to marriage. When marriages failed, they advocated liberal access to divorce. These activists differed in their attitudes toward legal marriage, insofar as the moderates still had faith in the institution, but they shared the fundamental insight that marriage should be a voluntary, loving relationship, and used variations on the idea of adultery to convey wrongs and harms within the legal bond of a marriage."--$cProvided by publisher. |
Subj:Topical |
650
|
0 |
$aAdultery$zUnited States$xHistory$y19th century. |
Subj:Topical |
650
|
0 |
$aMarriage$zUnited States$xHistory$y19th century. |
Subj:Topical |
650
|
0 |
$aLove$zUnited States$xHistory$y19th century. |
Subj:Topical |
650
|
0 |
$aMan-woman relationships$zUnited States$xHistory$y19th century. |
Subj:Topical |
650
|
0 |
$aWomen's rights$zUnited States$xHistory$y19th century. |
SE:Ufm Title |
830
|
0 |
$aHaney Foundation series. |