A History of Marriage explained

Author:Elizabeth Abbott
Isbn:978-0143017141
Pub Date:29 December 2009
Language:English
Publisher:Penguin Canada

A History of Marriage, published by Penguin Canada in 2009, is a non-fiction book by Elizabeth Abbott, the Canadian author of A History of Celibacy (1999) and A History of Mistresses (2003) that combines general history and personal histories of marriage. The book is a study of mostly North American rituals of courting, nuptials, marriage, sex, child-raising and divorce. Some topics covered are relative ages at which various societies from Chinese to Mormon married off their girls; details of the satisfying marriage of Martin Luther and former nun Katharina von Bora; the ruptured family units of Native American children removed to residential schools; the popularity of so-called Boston marriages (depicted by Henry James in The Bostonians) between like-minded women who resisted conventional marriage but weren't necessarily lesbian; and the scarcity of sponges used for contraception by Northern women during the Civil War because of the cut-off in supply from Florida.[1] A History of Marriage was a finalist for the 2010 Governor General's Literary Award for non-fiction.[2]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/non-fiction/elizabeth-abbott/history-marriage/ Kirkus Reviews March 1st, 2011
  2. Canada Council for the Arts. Web site: The Canada Council for the Arts - GGLA 2010 English Language Books . 2011-04-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110514140711/http://www.canadacouncil.ca/prizes/ggla/2010/default.htm . 2011-05-14 .