Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Domestic Intimacies Brian Connolly

Domestic Intimacies By Brian Connolly

Domestic Intimacies by Brian Connolly


$18.55
Condition - Good
Only 1 left

Summary

Domestic Intimacies upends histories of the family, sexuality, and liberalism in nineteenth-century America by placing incest at the center of all of them, arguing that the simultaneous valorization of sentimental family and autonomous individual were constructed in relation to the threat of incest.

Faster Shipping

Get this product faster from our US warehouse

Domestic Intimacies Summary

Domestic Intimacies: Incest and the Liberal Subject in Nineteenth-Century America by Brian Connolly

Although it is commonly thought that incest has been taboo throughout history, nineteenth-century Americans evinced a great cultural anxiety that the prohibition was failing. Theologians debated the meaning and limits of biblical proscription, while jurists abandoned such injunctions and invented a new prohibition organized around the nuclear family. Novelists crafted fictional tales of accidental incest resulting from the severed ties between public and private life, while antislavery writers lamented the ramifications of breaking apart enslaved families. Phrenologists and physiologists established reproduction as the primary motivation of the incest prohibition while naturalizing the incestuous eroticism of sentimental family affection. Ethnographers imagined incest as the norm in so-called primitive societies in contrast to modern civilization. In the absence of clear biological or religious limitations, the young republic developed numerous, varied, and contradictory incest prohibitions.

Domestic Intimacies offers a wide-ranging, critical history of incest and its various prohibitions as they were defined throughout the nineteenth century. Historian Brian Connolly argues that at the center of these convergent anxieties and debates lay the idea of the liberal subject: an autonomous individual who acted on his own desires yet was tempered by reason, who enjoyed a life in public yet was expected to find his greatest satisfaction in family and home. Always lurking was the need to exercise personal freedom with restraint; indeed, the valorization of the affectionate family was rooted in its capacity to act as a bulwark against licentiousness. However it was defined, incest was thus not only perceived as a threat to social stability; it also functioned to regulate social relations-within families and between classes as well as among women and men, slaves and free citizens, strangers and friends. Domestic Intimacies overturns conventional histories of American liberalism by placing the fear of incest at the heart of nineteenth-century conflicts over public life and privacy, kinship and individualism, social contracts and personal freedom.

Domestic Intimacies Reviews

Domestic Intimacies is pathbreaking. It lays bare the ways destabilizing sexual desires penetrated American liberal thought and shifted sovereignty from the state to the individual, who in turn emerged as a desiring subject, obsessed with his rights, disdainful of government and constraint. I predict the book will transform our understanding of Victorian America. I know it has mine.-Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, author of This Violent Empire: The Birth of an American National Identity


Domestic Intimacies is a provocative and pathbreaking work. By demonstrating that the incest prohibition has a surprisingly complex history, Connolly not only offers a new account of the fundamental contradictions of the nineteenth-century family, he also historicizes the concepts of anthropology and psychoanalysis. Conceptually sophisticated and empirically dense, the book deserves a wide and multidisciplinary audience. It is a real standout performance.-Michael Meranze, University of California, Los Angeles


Domestic Intimacies is one of those books that leads us to think differently about the categories and concepts that have long been taken for granted. It is what might be called 'critical history' at its best.-Joan W. Scott, Institute for Advanced Study

About Brian Connolly

Brian Connolly teaches history at the University of South Florida.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Liberalism's Incestuous Subject
Chapter 1. Literature
Chapter 2. Theology
Chapter 3. Law
Chapter 4. Reproduction
Chapter 5. Slavery
Epilogue. The Geopolitics of Incest

Appendix. The Theoretical Life of the Incest Prohibition
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments

Additional information

CIN0812246217G
9780812246216
0812246217
Domestic Intimacies: Incest and the Liberal Subject in Nineteenth-Century America by Brian Connolly
Used - Good
Hardback
University of Pennsylvania Press
20140521
304
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Domestic Intimacies