Sexual Violence in History: A Bibliography

compiled by Stefan Blaschke

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Start: Alphabetical Index: Author Index: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | Unknown

First published: February 1, 2026 - Last updated: February 1, 2026

TITLE INFORMATION

Author: Stephanie McCurry

Title: Ku Klux Klan Violence and the Problem of Evidence

Subtitle: -

Journal: Law and History Review

Volume: 43

Issue: 2: Archives of Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones (Edited by Rosemary Byrne, Stephanie McCurry and Jane Ohlmeyer)

Year: 2025 (Published online: August 18, 2025)

Pages: 239-257

pISSN: 0738-2480 - Find a Library: WorldCat | eISSN: 1939-9022 - Find a Library: WorldCat

Language: English

Keywords: Modern History: 19th Century | American History: U.S. History | Types: Rape / Interracial Rape



FULL TEXT

Link: Cambridge Core (Free Access)



ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Author: Stephanie McCurry, Department of History, Columbia University - Personal Website, Wikipedia

Abstract: »This article offers a forensic analysis of one key archive of sexual violence: The official record of a congressional investigation of the Ku Klux Klan and federal trials of Klan members in the years immediately after the American Civil War. The 13 volumes constitute the single most important source of victim testimony on white supremacist violence and are used widely by historians. It also presents daunting problems of interpretation particularly with respect to sexual violence. This analysis challenges historians’ traditional accounts of the Klan as overly reliant on the Republican party narrative that it constituted the terrorist arm of the Democratic party intent on suppressing black men’s new constitutional right to vote.
As I argue here, the Klan’s campaign of terror aimed at something far more, as the routine deployment of sexual violence against women reveals. Sexual regulation was the very core of white supremacy. The representation of the Klan in the official record—its signature acts, motives, and victims—was shaped not by the patterns of the violence itself but by the objectives of the investigation in the battle over public opinion and political strategy. In time and place, I argue, the narrow framing of Klan violence around electoral politics involved real costs to black women victims of the Klan with respect to the protection of their civil and political—or human—rights.« (Source: Law and History Review)

Contents:
  Abstract (p. 239)
  The Conflict (p. 241)
  The Investigation and Trials (p. 242)
  The Archive and the Problem of Evidence (p. 244)
    How the political inquiry shaped the evidence (p. 245)
    Trace evidence of sexual violence against women (p. 247)
  The Trials (p. 253)
  Acknowledgments (p. 257)

Wikipedia: History of the Americas: History of the United States | Racism: Racism in the United States / Ku Klux Klan | Sex and the law: Rape / Rape in the United States