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: September 1, 2024 - Last updated: September 1, 2024

TITLE INFORMATION

Author: Michelle Snidal

Title: Rape in Revolutionary America, 1760-1815

Subtitle: -

Thesis: M.A. Thesis, University of Victoria

Advisor: Rachel Hope Cleves

Year: 2021

Pages: vi + 126pp.

Language: English

Keywords: Modern History: 18th Century | American History: U.S. History | Types: Rape; Types: Wartime Sexual Violence / American Revolutionary War



FULL TEXT

Link: UVicSpace: Institutional Repository of the University of Victoria (Free Access)



ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Abstract: »Rape had an indelible effect on the American Revolutionary era. Using trial testimonies and depositions, newspapers, and literary sources, this thesis argues that there was a level of continuity between peacetime and wartime rape characterized by the assaulters’ modus operandi and rape’s ideological exploitation. Eighteenth-century Anglo-American society dictated that rape, or “carnal knowledge of a woman forcibly against her will,” was only a crime against virtuous white women. The gendered and racialized ways pre-revolutionary society identified and prosecuted rape influenced how rapists conducted their assaults. Women had to prove their sexual morality, that penile penetration and male ejaculation occurred, and that they sought help immediately after the assault to prosecute their attackers. During the war, rape became an important metaphor. Wartime publishers and propagandists used reports and victim testimonies as evidence of British immorality and to justify political independence. The rape of America subsumed individual atrocities. The nationalization of women’s sexual virtue continued into the new Republic. Artists and writers memorialized the Revolution through explicitly sexualized narratives and sentimental novels that emphasized female sexual morality. Women’s sexual virtue was linked with the stability of the Republic. This thesis utilizes a diverse historiography to highlight the intersectional correlations between rape and eighteenth-century patriarchal power in America.« (Source: Thesis)

Contents:
  Abstract (p. iii)
  List of Figures (p. v)
  Acknowledgements (p. vi)
  Introduction (p. 1)
  Chapter One: “Carnal Knowledge Forcibly Against Her Will”: The Continuities of Eighteenth-Century Rape (p. 12)
  Chapter Two: The Rape of America: Revolutionary Propaganda and Rape’s Symbolism (p. 45)
    Rape and Morality in Early American Print Culture (p. 49)
    Rape and Propaganda (p. 54)
    The Silences of Rape Symbolism (p. 70)
  Chapter Three: For the Good of the Republic: The Nationalization of Virtue (p. 75)
  Conclusion (p. 110)
  A Note on Sources (p. 113)
  Bibliography (p. 114)
    Primary Sources (p. 114)
      Broadsides (p. 114)
      Letters (p. 114)
      Images and Paintings (p. 115)
      Journals of the Continental Congress (p. 115)
      Miscellaneous (p. 115)
      Newspaper Articles (p. 117)
      Papers of the Continental Congress (p. 118)
      Sermons and Speeches (p. 118)
      Trial Testimony (p. 119)
    Secondary Sources (p. 120)

Wikipedia: History of the Americas: History of the United States / Colonial history of the United States | Sex and the law: Rape / Rape in the United States | War: American Revolutionary War