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>
> Marriage under Adversity By Emily West
>
> *This timely piece of work reminds us that the rights we sometimes take
> for granted have not always been available to all.*
>
>  clip -
>
> As Tera Hunter points out in concluding her meticulously researched,
> eloquent and accessible book, who can (and cannot) legally marry in any
> society has always been subject to state sanction via the right to enter
> wedlock and wider issues of legal citizenship. For example, only in the
> twenty-first century have same-sex couples been able to marry on the same
> footing as heterosexual ones. But as well as sexual affiliation, race and
> ethnicity have shaped the contours of state policies on wedlock, largely
> because of the exclusionary ethnic barriers to legal citizenship in the
> United States. Hunter explores these contentious issues through the prism
> of black marriages over the course of the nineteenth century. This
> chronological spread is one of this impressive book’s strengths. Only by
> tracking wedlock through slavery, the Civil War, emancipation,
> Reconstruction, and then the era of Jim Crow segregation, can we fully
> understand how the nature of black marriage changed over time. In addition
> to her chronological breadth, Hunter also engages with a range of
> perspectives on nineteenth-century black marriage. She includes the views
> of enslaved and formerly enslaved people themselves, notwithstanding the
> methodological challenges posed by a limited source base. She explores a
> large amount of legal evidence and official policies related to marriage at
> both the federal and state level. As such, Hunter successfully integrates
> disparate historiographical strands of social, political and legal history.
> This is a real achievement in itself.
>
>
> full -  http://common-place.org/book/vol-18-no-1-west/
>
>
>
>
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