This book tells the story of how ordinary Peruvian men and women
experienced their lives, and especially their marriages, in a
patriarchal society and how, through the struggles involved in
divorce, women tried to defend their rights and in the process
helped bring about change in society more broadly.
Careful examination of more than one thousand cases of conjugal
suits filed in Lima's archbishopric, as well as wills in notarial
records, allowed the author to trace over time quarreling spouses'
relationships, attitudes, and perceptions of gender, life cycle,
race, and class and to study their evolving moral expectations and
the varying pace of social change.
The history of this marital dialogue reveals the construction of
a new terminology, based on liberal ideas imported from England and
France, that found its way into domestic life and influenced how
conflicts were perceived and resolved. Far from opening doors for
women, liberalism maintained women's inferior status but also
shifted the ground on which women waged battles for survival.
By the end of the nineteenth century, many women had concluded
that basic patriarchal and Christian arrangements were a sham, and
they sought ways to cope within a system rife with hypocrisy. This
book shows how women and children, made destitute by intimate
tyranny, challenged this tyranny by finding new means of defense
and social support.
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