Brabbling Women: Disorderly Speech and the Law in Early Virginia

Brabbling Women: Disorderly Speech and the Law in Early Virginia

by Terri L. Snyder
Brabbling Women: Disorderly Speech and the Law in Early Virginia

Brabbling Women: Disorderly Speech and the Law in Early Virginia

by Terri L. Snyder

eBook

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Overview

Brabbling Women takes its title from a 1662 law enacted by Virginia's burgesses, which was intended to offer relief to the "poore husbands" forced into defamation suits because their "brabling" wives had slandered or scandalized their neighbors. To quell such episodes of female misrule, lawmakers decreed that husbands could choose either to pay damages or to have their wives publicly ducked.

But there was more at stake here. By examining women's use of language, Terri L. Snyder demonstrates how women resisted and challenged oppressive political, legal, and cultural practices in colonial Virginia. Contending that women's voices are heard most clearly during episodes of crisis, Snyder focuses on disorderly speech to illustrate women's complex relationships to law and authority in the seventeenth century.

Ordinary women, Snyder finds, employed a variety of strategies to prevail in domestic crises over sexual coercion and adultery, conflicts over women's status as servants or slaves, and threats to women's authority as independent household governors. Some women entered the political forum, openly participating as rebels or loyalists; others sought legal redress for their complaints. Wives protested the confines of marriage; unfree women spoke against masters and servitude. By the force of their words, all strove to thwart political leaders and local officials, as well as the power of husbands, masters, and neighbors. The tactics colonial women used, and the successes they met, reflect the struggles for empowerment taking place in defiance of the inequalities of the colonial period.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801469923
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 02/15/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Terri L. Snyder is Professor of American Studies at California State University, Fullerton.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction: Brabbling Women in Early Virginia1
1.Women, Misrule, and Political Culture19
2.Sexual Stories: Narratives of Consent and Coercion45
3.Unwifely Speeches and the Authority of Husbands67
4.Freedom, Dependency, and the Power of Women's Speech89
5.Widows, Fictive Widows, and the Management of Households117
Conclusion: Toward the Eighteenth Century140
Notes145
Index179

What People are Saying About This

Kathleen M. Brown

Brabbling Women is a thoughtful, well crafted analysis of gendered power in colonial Virginia that adds new dimensions to the existing literature on this topic. As a microhistorian and a legal historian, Terri L. Snyder is without peer among the scholars who have mined the court records of colonial Virginia to learn more about its gender history.

Cynthia A. Kierner

Terri L. Snyder's research deals with an important and often neglected topic: the interaction of women of all social ranks with the courts and other structures of authority in a colony outside New England. Her approach to her topic is unusually imaginative, and she is well-versed in the secondary literature of both colonial America and early modern England.

Mary Beth Norton

This is an enlightening and intriguing book about the many disorderly women in seventeenth-century Virginia. Terri L. Snyder's focus on outspoken, 'brabbling' women brings to light the chronological and regional specificity of women's experiences in early America.

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