Available Formats
Love, Intimacy and Power: Marriage and Patriarchy in Scotland, 16501850
By (Author) Katie Barclay
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
31st August 2011
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
306.8109411
Winner of Women's History Network Book Prize 2012 (UK)
Hardback
232
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Through an analysis of the correspondence of over one hundred couples from the Scottish elites across the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries, this book explores how ideas around the nature of emotional intimacy, love, and friendship within marriage adapted to a modernising economy and society. Patriarchy continued to be the central model for marriage across the period and as a result, women found spaces to hold power within the family, but could not translate it to power beyond the household. Comparing the Scottish experience to that across Europe and North America, Barclay shows that throughout the eighteenth-century, far from being a side-note in European history, Scottish ideas about gender and marriage became culturally dominant. This book will be vital to those studying and teaching Scottish social history, and those interested in the history of marriage and gender. It will also appeal to feminists interested in the history of patriarchy. -- .
Winner of the 2012 Senior Hume Brown Prize in Scottish History and the 2012 Women's History Network (UK) Book Prize -- .
Katie Barclay is a Research Fellow in Irish Studies at Queen's University, Belfast