Policies concerning marriage, morality, and intimacy were central to the efforts of the Spanish monarchy to maintain social control in colonial Charcas. The Bourbon Crown depended on the patriarchal, caste-based social system on which its colonial enterprise was built to maintain control over a vast region that today encompasses Bolivia and parts of Peru, Chile, Paraguay, and Argentina. Intimacy became a fulcrum of social control contested by individuals, families, the state, and the Catholic Church, and deeply personal emotions and experiences were unwillingly transformed into social, political, and moral challenges. In Of Love and Loathing, Nicholas A. Robins examines the application of late-colonial Bourbon policies concerning marriage, morality, and intimacy. Robins examines how such policies and the means by which they were enforced highlight the moral, racial, and patriarchal ideals of the time, and, more important, the degree to which the policies were evaded. Not only did free unions, illegitimate children, and de facto divorces abound, but women also had significantly more agency regarding resources, relationships, and movement than has previously been recognized. A surprising image of society emerges from Robins’s analysis, one with considerably more moral latitude than can be found from the perspectives of religious doctrine and regal edicts.
Nicholas A. Robins
Of Love and Loathing [EPUB ebook]
Marital Life, Strife, and Intimacy in the Colonial Andes, 1750-1825
Of Love and Loathing [EPUB ebook]
Marital Life, Strife, and Intimacy in the Colonial Andes, 1750-1825
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Limba Engleză ● Format EPUB ● ISBN 9780803284500 ● Editura UNP – Nebraska ● Publicat 2015 ● Descărcabil 3 ori ● Valută EUR ● ID 5842306 ● Protecție împotriva copiilor Adobe DRM
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