Description

Book Synopsis
Drawing on rich archival sources, explores the relationship between honor and violence in the Périgord region in prerevolutionary France. Historians and scholars across other disciplines have long sought an explanation for why late medieval and early modern Europeans experienced elevated rates of violent crime, and for why society apparently tolerated such high levels of interpersonal violence. Most of our existing explanations focus on the macro level, looking at causes like the rise of the state or the concomitant cultural shift toward civility. In this study, author Steven G. Reinhardt utilizes a more micro-level, descriptive approach to examine the intersection of honor and violence in prerevolutionary France, in particular in the Périgord region between 1770 and 1790. Drawing on archival sources (such as interrogations, petitions, and inquests), Reinhardt vividly conveys the texture of ordinary people's everyday experiences. Based on a sampling of criminal court cases from a region marginally integrated into the emerging capitalist economy, Violence and Honor in Prerevolutionary Périgord presents a series of extraordinarily rich narratives illustrating their subjects' understanding of the imperatives of the honor code. Combining careful scholarship with popular history, the book will interest historians of early modern Europe, legal scholars, and anthropologists of law, as well as students and general readers interested in the history of violence. Steven G.Reinhardt is associate professor of history at the University of Texas at Arlington.

Trade Review
[A]n illuminating read, pointing to important themes of changing cultural norms and the intersection between the private sphere and the increasing encroachment of the state and criminal justice. * H-FRANCE *

Table of Contents
Introduction Acknowledgments Violence and Honor Honor in a Cross-Cultural Context From Honor to Honnêteté in Old Regime Europe "The Good Old Days" in Prerevolutionary Sarladais "The Saint of Honor" in the Sénéchaussée of Sarlat Women and Honor-Related Criminal Affaires Policing Honnêteté: Shameful, Sinful, and Criminal Conduct "Fallen Women" and Infanticide Compromised Honor and Dangerous Liaisons Honor and Homicide Conlusion Notes Bibliography Index

Violence and Honor in Prerevolutionary Périgord

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    A Hardback by Steven G. Reinhardt

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      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 10/02/2018
      ISBN13: 9781580465830, 978-1580465830
      ISBN10: 1580465838

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Drawing on rich archival sources, explores the relationship between honor and violence in the Périgord region in prerevolutionary France. Historians and scholars across other disciplines have long sought an explanation for why late medieval and early modern Europeans experienced elevated rates of violent crime, and for why society apparently tolerated such high levels of interpersonal violence. Most of our existing explanations focus on the macro level, looking at causes like the rise of the state or the concomitant cultural shift toward civility. In this study, author Steven G. Reinhardt utilizes a more micro-level, descriptive approach to examine the intersection of honor and violence in prerevolutionary France, in particular in the Périgord region between 1770 and 1790. Drawing on archival sources (such as interrogations, petitions, and inquests), Reinhardt vividly conveys the texture of ordinary people's everyday experiences. Based on a sampling of criminal court cases from a region marginally integrated into the emerging capitalist economy, Violence and Honor in Prerevolutionary Périgord presents a series of extraordinarily rich narratives illustrating their subjects' understanding of the imperatives of the honor code. Combining careful scholarship with popular history, the book will interest historians of early modern Europe, legal scholars, and anthropologists of law, as well as students and general readers interested in the history of violence. Steven G.Reinhardt is associate professor of history at the University of Texas at Arlington.

      Trade Review
      [A]n illuminating read, pointing to important themes of changing cultural norms and the intersection between the private sphere and the increasing encroachment of the state and criminal justice. * H-FRANCE *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Acknowledgments Violence and Honor Honor in a Cross-Cultural Context From Honor to Honnêteté in Old Regime Europe "The Good Old Days" in Prerevolutionary Sarladais "The Saint of Honor" in the Sénéchaussée of Sarlat Women and Honor-Related Criminal Affaires Policing Honnêteté: Shameful, Sinful, and Criminal Conduct "Fallen Women" and Infanticide Compromised Honor and Dangerous Liaisons Honor and Homicide Conlusion Notes Bibliography Index

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