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In this book Sueann Caulfield explores the changing meanings of
honor in early-twentieth-century Brazil, a period that saw an
extraordinary proliferation of public debates that linked morality,
modernity, honor, and national progress. With a close examination
of legal theory on sexual offenses and case law in Rio de Janeiro
from the end of World War I to the early years of the Estado Novo
dictatorship, Caulfield reveals how everyday interpretations of
honor influenced official attitudes and even the law itself as
Brazil attempted to modernize.
While some Brazilian elites used the issue of sexual purity to
boast of their country's moral superiority, others claimed that the
veneration of such concepts as virginity actually frustrated
efforts at modernization. Moreover, although individuals of all
social classes invoked values they considered "traditional," such
as the confinement of women's sexuality within marriage, these
values were at odds with social practices--such as premarital sex,
cohabitation, divorce, and female-headed households--that had been
common throughout Brazil's history. The persistence of these
practices, together with post-World War I changes in both official
and popular moral ideals, presented formidable obstacles to the
Estado Novo's renewed drive to define and enforce public morality
and private family values in the late 1930s.
With sophisticated theoretical underpinnings, "In Defense of
Honor" is written in a clear and lively manner, making it
accessible to students and scholars in a variety of disciplines,
including Brazilian and Latin American studies, gender studies, and
legal history.
This collection brings together recent scholarship that examines
how understandings of honor changed in Latin America between
political independence in the early nineteenth century and the rise
of nationalist challenges to liberalism in the 1930s. These rich
historical case studies reveal the uneven processes through which
ideas of honor and status came to depend more on achievements such
as education and employment and less on the birthright privileges
that were the mainstays of honor during the colonial period.
Whether considering court battles over lost virginity or police
conflicts with prostitutes, vagrants, and the poor over public
decorum, the contributors illuminate shifting ideas about public
and private spheres, changing conceptions of race, the growing
intervention of the state in defining and arbitrating individual
reputations, and the enduring role of patriarchy in apportioning
both honor and legal rights.Each essay examines honor in the
context of specific historical processes, including early
republican nation-building in Peru; the transformation in Mexican
villages of the cargo system, by which men rose in rank through
service to the community; the abolition of slavery in Rio de
Janeiro; the growth of local commerce and shifts in women's status
in highland Bolivia; the formation of a multiethnic society on
Costa Rica's Caribbean coast; and the development of nationalist
cultural responses to U.S. colonialism in Puerto Rico. By
connecting liberal projects that aimed to modernize law and society
with popular understandings of honor and status, this volume sheds
new light on broad changes and continuities in Latin America over
the course of the long nineteenth century. Contributors. Jose
Amador de Jesus, Rossana Barragan, Sueann Caulfield, Sidney
Chalhoub, Sarah C. Chambers, Eileen J. Findley, Brodwyn Fischer,
Olivia Maria Gomes da Cunha, Laura Gotkowitz, Keila Grinberg, Peter
Guardino, Cristiana Schettini Pereira, Lara Elizabeth Putnam
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