Sexual Violence in History: A Bibliography

compiled by Stefan Blaschke

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First published: March 1, 2025 - Last updated: March 1, 2025

TITLE INFORMATION

Author: Marianna Muravyeva

Title: Abduction of Women in Early Modern Russia

Subtitle: -

Journal: Russian History

Volume: 43

Issue: 3-4: Gender and Crime in Russian History

Year: December 2016

Pages: 338-372

pISSN: 0094-288X - Find a Library: WorldCat | eISSN: 1876-3316 - Find a Library: WorldCat

Language: English

Keywords: Modern History: 17th Century, 18th Century | European History: Russian History | Types: Rape



FULL TEXT

Link: JSTOR (Restricted Access)



ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Author: Marianna Muravyeva, Aleksanteri-instituutti (Aleksanteri Institute), Helsingin Yliopisto (University of Helsinki) - Academia.edu, Google Scholar, ORICD, ResaerchGate

Abstract: »The abduction of women is closely connected with traditional or primitive societies. Anthropologists tie it with alternative marriage arrangements, characteristic of those systems where marriages are arranged by parents; historians tend to view the abduction of women as part of early history of developed nations, mostly the Middle Ages. In Russia, recent historiographical discussion of abductions always starts with descriptions of customary practices in Siberia to highlight the steppe and frontier experiences in the framework of colonization and underline ‘savage’ or ‘backwardness’ of Siberian populations. However, scholars almost never talk about the abduction of women within the European part. In this article, female abductions are analyzed within the framework of citizenship and modernization of the Russian Empire in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It focuses on the notion of consent and how it contributed to the founding of a new social unit, that is the family, in which women and men acquired their rights and duties in relation to outside society and wider polity. The lack of consent jeopardized the legitimacy of such a union and compromized the citizenship status of its members. On its way to build the country as a modern empire, Russian authorities localized the abduction of women as a ‘customary’ practice of ‘backwards’ people to preserve the modern European core of the Empire.« (Source: Russian History)

Contents:
  Abstract (p. 338)
  Introduction (p. 339)
  Abduction, Marriage, and Rape: Controlling Bodies and Property (p. 343)
  Breeding the Nation: Serfdom, Forced Marriages, and the Appropriated Body (p. 350)
  Negotiating Citizenship: Women as Hostages of Patriarchy (p. 356)
  Establishing Modernity: Abduction of Women among Non-Russian Peoples (p. 361)
  Conclusion (p. 369)

Wikipedia: History of Europe: History of Russia | Sex and the law: Rape / Rape in Russia