|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This volume has for its main object an inquiry into the actual
social and domestic position of women under the system of plural
marriage. Polygamy, like monogamy, must be judged by its fruits. In
the East, cultured advocates and apologists have explained the
biological and racial causes of the practice, and contrasted it
with the single marriage custom of the West. Among European and
other Western writers, solicitous for the truth, there are those
who avow frankly that, from observation and investigation, they are
disposed to regard polygamy as an institution with certain distinct
advantages for women. Equally sincere critics have condemned this
form of marriage, sometimes judicially, and often with passion. One
writer, approaching the question with conclusions already formed,
denounces zenana life for women as abominable; while another of a
more dispassionate cast, viewing the subject from various aspects,
discovers that a practice of the sex-relationship, sanctioned by
many devout and humane teachers, cannot be compounded entirely of
evil. From a mass of conflicting opinion, I have sought to sift the
truth. At all events, I have tried to avoid both enthusiastic
approval and heated condemnation. My numerous authorities, Eastern
and Western, must be judged by my readers with a fair mind. I have
rejected neither disapprobation nor censure.
Early Days of Mormonism Palmyra, Kirtland, And Nauvoo By J.H.
Kennedy
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
|