Sexual Violence in History: A Bibliography

compiled by Stefan Blaschke

Concact

+ Stefan Blaschke


Introduction

+ Aims & Scope

+ Structure

+ History


Announcements

+ Updates

+ Calls for Papers

+ New Lectures

+ New Publications


Alphabetical Index

+ Author Index

+ Speaker Index


Chronological Index

+ Ancient History

+ Medieval History

+ Modern History


Geographical Index

+ African History

+ American History

+ Asian History

+ European History

+ Oceanian History


Topical Index

+ Prosecution

+ Cases

+ Types

+ Offenders

+ Victims

+ Society

+ Research

+ Representations


Resources

+ Institutions

+ Literature Search

+ Research

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: May 1, 2023 – Last updated: May 1, 2023

TITLE INFORMATION

Author: Ángela Pérez-Villa

Title: Enslaved Litigants, Emotions, and a Shifting Legal Landscape in Cauca, Colombia (1825–1831)

Subtitle:

Journal: Journal of Social History: Societies & Cultures

Volume: (Published online before print)

Issue:

Year: Fall 2023 (Published online: April 1, 2023)

Pages: 29 pages (PDF)

pISSN: 0022-4529 – Find a Library: WorldCat | eISSN: 1527-1897 – Find a Library: WorldCat

Language: English

Keywords: Modern History: 19th Century | American History: Colombian History | Cases: Real Offenders / José Castillo y Erazo; Cases: Real Victims / Maía Lucas Domínguez; Types: Rape / Slave Rape; Offenders: Social Status / Slave Masters; Victims: Social Status / Slaves



FULL TEXT

Link: Oxford University Press (Free Access)



ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Author: Ángela Pérez-Villa, Department of History, Western Michigan UniversityAcademia.edu, ORCID

Abstract: »This article reconstructs judicial practice in Cauca, Republic of Colombia, through the close reading of two criminal court cases involving enslaved litigants during the early transition from colony to independent state. In 1825, the enactment of laws that created new courts, judgeships, and procedures aimed to restructure and strengthen judicial practice in a nascent republic convulsed by internal division, which would disintegrate politically in 1831. Enslaved people—who had a long engagement with the law since colonial times—litigated in thiscontext of political and judicial transformation in cases about adultery, theft, murder, vagrancy, cruelty, and freedom. This article sheds light on how these litigants were caught in the tensions that emerged between low- and high-ranking legal authorities over conflicting understandings of the role of religious thinking and the use of emotions in the adjudication of criminal cases and their appeals. In addition to drawing from the rich scholarship on slavery and the law in Latin America, this article broadly addresses recent calls from Latin America-based scholars to nourish national historiographies by inserting “the emotional” into the analytical framework. Through this approach, enslaved litigants appear moving through an uneven judicial apparatus in which authorities tried balancing their desire to uphold new procedural rules to create a secular legal sphere on the one hand and their personal religious convictions and status as enslavers on the other.« (Source: Journal of Social History)

Contents:
  Abstract (p. 1)
  Popayan and the Changes to the Judicial System after Independence (p. 4)
  Administering Justice: Between a Colonial Past and an Incipient Liberal Present (p. 5)
  Manuel Agustín Moreno: An Infectious Threat for the Enslaved (p. 8)
  Maía Lucas Domínguez: Raped or Morally Corrupted? (p. 11)
  Endnotes (p. 18)

Wikipedia: History of the Americas: History of Colombia / Gran Colombia | Slavery: History of slavery / Slavery in Colombia | Sex and the law: Rape / History of rape