Abstract

Few signifiers of the persistence of gender inequality are more potent than the evidence across many centuries of men beating their domestic partners. Yet the historicization of family conflict demands that we interrogate the specific and widely varied dynamics that shaped attitudes toward and experiences of spousal violence. Although a seventeenth-century woman was legally subject to her husband’s discipline, wives themselves as well as individuals and institutions in local communities publicly negotiated the parameters of that discipline. A twentieth-century woman living in a community that valorized romantic, companionate, and privatized ideals of marriage was, by contrast, isolated and wary of public acknowledgment of her status as a battered wife. This essay explores the matrix of early modern urban conjugal battery in seventeenth-century France to examine how and why individuals and communities defined the use of force between spouses as they did. Despite cliches about the early modern period’s acceptance of wife beating, attitudes toward domestic violence were complex. Certainly, men’s aggression toward their wives was naturalized to a degree, and women’s violence against their husbands was demonized.1 But, in practice, women as well as men, in courts and in communities, negotiated parameters for spousal behavior that defined husbands’ prerogatives in using force. What issues defined some men’s behavior

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