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Unknown
First published: February 1, 2026 - Last updated: February 1, 2026
TITLE INFORMATION
Author: Morgan Gray
Title: Beyond Honor
Subtitle: Historicizing Sexual Coercion in Late Colonial Lima, 1750-1821
Thesis: Ph.D. Thesis, Florida International University
Advisor: Bianca Premo
Year: 2022
Pages: vi + 187pp
OCLC Number: 1407386508 -
Find a Library: WorldCat
Language: English
Keywords:
Modern History:
18th Century,
19th Century |
American History:
Peruvian History |
Types:
Rape
FULL TEXT
Link:
FIU Digital Scholarship Commons (Free Access)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Author:
Morgan Gray,
Department of History,
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Abstract:
»Sexual assault and sexual coercion are intensely emotional crimes that have been the focus of many recent public discussions around the world, including protests and reforms in Latin America. As such, the history of these crimes in countries like Peru provides vital context for reformers and scholars alike. This research aims to incorporate women’s emotional experiences of sexual coercion into the legal and cultural context of Peru’s capital city between 1750 and 1821, and thus to illustrate that social and political changes also affected individual women’s pursuit of justice. Using dozens of court cases from the ecclesiastical and royal secular courts, along with legal codes, nuns’ writings, and published newspaper editorials, I connect cultural perceptions of gender to legal decisions and thence to the ways in which women and their families articulated their coercion experiences.
In late colonial Lima, gender biases and stereotypes reflected both traditional religious and modern Enlightenment interpretations of gender, embedding expectations of female inferiority into Lima’s culture. These expectations were further reflected in the fact that many coercion cases came to the courts when women’s guardians objected to runaway marriages. Nonetheless, some women—including enslaved women—advocated for themselves within a contractual definition of consensual sex, using their verbal agreements and marriage promises as leverage to gain legal protection within Lima’s patriarchal system. The courts themselves upheld many of the racial and socioeconomic divisions on which colonial Peruvian society operated, typically supporting litigants who were racially or socially superior to their antagonists. In the early nineteenth century, however, it became increasingly challenging for women and their guardians to obtain convictions for sexual coercion, as changes in administrative structures and priorities restricted the range of acceptable arguments. These structural changes in turn affected the emotions that women could express, indicating a homogenization of emotional expression in sexual coercion cases and thus of the experiences themselves. Together, the emotional, legal, and cultural dynamics of late colonial sexual coercion cases demonstrate that gendered power changed in subtle ways throughout the late colonial period, and thus affected the ways in which women and their guardians defined and sought justice.«
(Source: Thesis)
Contents:
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Acknowledgments (p. iii) |
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Abstract (p. iv) |
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Introduction (p. 1) |
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Historiography (p. 6) |
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Research Questions and Methodology (p. 10) |
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Chapter Overview (p. 18) |
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Chapter One: Sexual Behavior from the Outside In: Reconstructing the Gendered and Sexual Norms of Late Colonial Lima (p. 20) |
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Catholicism, the Enlightenment, and Gender in Late Colonial Lima (p. 26) |
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Female Pain: Religious Sanctification and Scientific Disregard (p. 35) |
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Honor, Community, and Sexual Encounters (p. 44) |
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Conclusion (p. 55) |
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Chapter Two: Reciprocal Contracts: Reconstructing Sexual Consent in Late Colonial Lima (p. 57) |
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The Power of Mutual Contract: Consent in the Ecclesiastical Court (p. 62) |
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Consent in Seduction: The Rights of Parents (p. 69) |
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Contract in Coercion (p. 76) |
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Conclusion (p. 80) |
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Chapter Three: In View of the Merits of the Case: Jurisdictional Priorities and Consolidation in Sexual Coercion Cases (p. 83) |
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A Plethora of Priorities: Sexual Coercion in the Late Eighteenth Century (p. 92) |
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Jurisdictional Consolidation and Sexual Coercion in the Nineteenth Century (p. 110) |
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Conclusion (p. 117) |
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Chapter Four: An Inherently Emotional Crime: Emotional Communities, Emotional Regimes, and the Individual Experiences of Sexual Coercion (p. 119) |
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Part One: Communities within the Regime, 1750-1799 (p. 125) |
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Establishing the Late Colonial Emotional Regime (p. 125) |
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The Shape of Shame in the Secular Courts (p. 130) |
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Desperation, Shame, and Determination: The Story of Manuela Pando (p. 131) |
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Desperation and Outrage in the Ecclesiastical Court (p. 136) |
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Defiance, Miedo Reverencial, yiYand Repentence: The Story of Isabel Muchotrigo (p. 140) |
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Fear: Different Interpretations of the Same Emotion (p. 143) |
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He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not: Love and Betrayal in Sexual Coercion (p. 146) |
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Part Two: One Regime, 1800-1821 (p. 150) |
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Regrettable Errors and Shame in the Public Eye: Parents and Children in the Early Nineteenth Century (p. 151) |
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Terror, Pain, and Desperation: The Sad, Short Life of Maria Vicenta Villa (p. 154) |
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Fear and Betrayal: Carmen Venegas’s Elopement (p. 158) |
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Conclusion (p. 163) |
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Conclusion (p. 166) |
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Afterword (p. 172) |
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Bibliography (p. 177) |
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Unpublished Primary Sources (p. 177) |
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Published Primary Sources (p. 180) |
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Secondary Sources (p. 180) |
Note:
Gray, Morgan. »Reciprocal Contracts: Reconstructing Sexual Consent in Late Colonial Lima.« The Latin Americanist 69 (2025): 348-372. -
Bibliographic Entry: Info
Wikipedia:
History of the Americas:
History of Peru /
Viceroyalty of Peru |
Sex and the law:
Sexual violence
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