underdown
crisis in gender relations
esp 1560-1640
anxieties about boundaries and new attempts reassert them
ingram critci
sexuality and reputation
gowing
gender mattered more to women than to men as an organising feature of their lives
legal system and women- hist
civil war and women
Opportunities for female agency: defending estates, participation in sects, petitioning parliament, crowd politics. Evokes anxiety about inversion of the gender order?
hist civil war and gender
masculinity
advice lit masculinity
chivalrous codes of mas- braithwaite- the eng gentlemen- what to wear etc - esp purotans 1630
- gouge domestically duties 1622
- ealrier ones dod and cleaer- godlie forme of householde gov 1598
marital relations masuclinity
dod and cleaver- a godlie form of househode gov
marriage reciprocal in a sense
man has responsibility for outside the home, but the woman does have the responsibility for things within it, and also painting honour fo family
policing sex -
precept gender= sources
bible
shakespeare
law \authoirty
precept gender- bible- positive gender relations
precept- shakespear
law precept gender
legal precept diff scot- gender
inequality in law- gender
different crimes for spousal murder – petty treason for woman. Major anxiety about infanticide; it was considered a solely female crime (See A Pittilesse Mother 1616) Laws against illegitimacy – ‘bastard getters’ – overwhelmingly enforced against mothers.
stats illegit children
Records for Hertfordshire, Lancashire, Somerset and Warwickshire for 203 women punished in the late Elizabethan and early Stuart period for having an illegitimate child: 65 imprisoned, 35% whipped. Of 135 men prosecuted, 4 % imprisoned, and 25 % whipped.
authority precept - gender
Sir Thomas Smith, De Republica Anglorum (pub. 1583), of the ‘parts and persons of the commonwealth’, ‘we do reject women, as those whom nature hath made to keep home and to nourish their family and children… except it be in such cases as the authority is annexed to the blood and progeny, as the crown.’
practice- gender
marrital customs vary thorughout british isles
household
womens work
sexual freedoms
marital customs vary regionally
highlands- custom trial arriages- see how go for year inc sexual relations tghen decide married properly
thought barbaric in eng
wales often live with kin
the household- gender stats
why late age marriage
reflects the assumption that marry when can form a secure socioeconomic unit. High number of remarriages, especially for men, complicates ideas of virginity and femininity?
why many men and women not marry
Demographic expansion – high numbers of journeymen, wage labourers etc. who don’t achieve economic independence; possibilities for unmarried women to support themselves through paid labour.
womens work pratcially
-can make textiles; married women can trade through specific feme sole customs in London and boroughs.
-As much as 60% of married women in London supported themselves through their own labour to some extent.
-In periods of economic contraction, it was women’s opportunities which declined first.
sexual freedoms
trail marriages in highlands
restoration court
libertinism