This chapter analyses the representation of bigamy within the English courts in the middle years of the twentieth century. It uses press reports of these trials to consider the work that emotion did, or was held to do, within the formation, experience and dissolution of relationships. Bigamy apparently undermined marriage by disregarding its legal foundations, but where love was invoked as a defence it also celebrated the relational aspects of marriage and pointed up its favoured status. Bigamy cases therefore simultaneously demonstrate the precariousness and the desirability of legal commitment. They also attest to the perceived power of authentic emotion
In this follow-up to the bestselling Marriage Law for Genealogists, Rebecca Probert explains marital...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper examines the relationship b...
Depositions (or testimony) in marriage cases brought before fifteenth-century English church courts ...
In a computer search of 18 national newspapers over a three-year period (1993–1945) 420 mentions of ...
This article explores the potentially subversive nature of a nineteenth-century case of bigamy. It d...
This thesis provides the first research into male bigamy in Scotland, examining criminal prosecution...
This dissertation considers the extent to which patterns of divorce and bigamy in Liverpool changed ...
Though divorce followed by remarriage was illegal in early modern England, a considerable number of ...
From 1857 (the year of its foundation) to 1923 (the year of the Matrimonial Causes Act) the Divorce ...
From 1857 (the year of its foundation) to 1923 (the year of the Matrimonial Causes Act) the Divorce ...
That emotion is a spatial phenomenon, constructed through material conditions and physical boundarie...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
Bigamy has attracted little attention from both criminologists and historians in the past few decade...
Legal arguments that a clergyman was unnecessary to form a legal marriage were increasingly raised i...
It was one of the most sensational trials of the Victorian age: the Hon. Wil-liam Charles Yelverton,...
In this follow-up to the bestselling Marriage Law for Genealogists, Rebecca Probert explains marital...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper examines the relationship b...
Depositions (or testimony) in marriage cases brought before fifteenth-century English church courts ...
In a computer search of 18 national newspapers over a three-year period (1993–1945) 420 mentions of ...
This article explores the potentially subversive nature of a nineteenth-century case of bigamy. It d...
This thesis provides the first research into male bigamy in Scotland, examining criminal prosecution...
This dissertation considers the extent to which patterns of divorce and bigamy in Liverpool changed ...
Though divorce followed by remarriage was illegal in early modern England, a considerable number of ...
From 1857 (the year of its foundation) to 1923 (the year of the Matrimonial Causes Act) the Divorce ...
From 1857 (the year of its foundation) to 1923 (the year of the Matrimonial Causes Act) the Divorce ...
That emotion is a spatial phenomenon, constructed through material conditions and physical boundarie...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
Bigamy has attracted little attention from both criminologists and historians in the past few decade...
Legal arguments that a clergyman was unnecessary to form a legal marriage were increasingly raised i...
It was one of the most sensational trials of the Victorian age: the Hon. Wil-liam Charles Yelverton,...
In this follow-up to the bestselling Marriage Law for Genealogists, Rebecca Probert explains marital...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper examines the relationship b...
Depositions (or testimony) in marriage cases brought before fifteenth-century English church courts ...