Seductive Arguments: Law, Elopement, and the Erosion of Parental Authority in Prerevolutionary France.

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  • Author(s): SLAIGHT, JILLIAN
  • Source:
    French Historical Studies. Oct2019, Vol. 42 Issue 4, p535-561. 27p.
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    • Abstract:
      Throughout the early modern period, French law forbade unsanctioned marriages between minors, a crime classified as "seduction." Men who wed without the consent of their bride's parents earned the designation "seducers" and faced the potential of capital punishment. By the mid-eighteenth century, notorious seduction cases assumed outsize significance because of radical changes in legal culture. From the 1760s until the eve of the Revolution, defense lawyers wielded the legal brief as a powerful instrument of public opinion, criticizing parental control over marriage and championing free choice in its place. These men transformed seduction cases into referendums on paternal power--and, by extension, the power of the monarchy itself. While historians have long examined politically charged critiques of paternal power during this period, this article explores these critiques' unique implications for unwed women. It illustrates how celebrated lawyers mobilized language of Enlightenment to carve out discursive space in which young women exercised autonomy vis-à-vis their parents. Nevertheless, it also argues that these same legal discourses constrained female happiness to the realm of marriage to sooth anxieties about the threat that disobedient daughters posed to family, social, and gender order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
    • Abstract:
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