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Adult children of parental infidelity and their perspectives of love, intimate relations, and marriageKoski, Michelle A. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis--PlanB (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Stout, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references.
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The connection between extramarital sex and sex rolesChuick, Christopher D. January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis--PlanB (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Stout, 1999. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Infidelity, the novel, and the lawLeckie, Barbara January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Infidelity, the novel, and the lawLeckie, Barbara January 1990 (has links)
This thesis examines the sociolegal context of the representation of infidelity in the Anglo-American novel. It locates the first serious Anglo-American treatment of infidelity in the novels of Henry James and Ford Madox Ford; and it situates these writers for the first time in their immediate legal context. The dominant mode through which infidelity was discursively defined during this period was simultaneously legal and sensational: the publication of "Divorce Court" trials in the daily newspapers. The implication of this context for the novel is twofold. The focus on narration from the perspective of the betrayed party prompts a local questioning of knowledge (of knowing one's spouse), and a more general questioning of the epistemoloigcal premises of the realist novel itself. The novels considered here make clear the limitations of a legal discourse committed to a disinterested record of "what happened." In the process, they illustrate several of the narrative innovations most distinctive to the modernist novel. Secondly, what will be called an "aesthetics of suspicion" and "domestic surveillance" distinguishes James's and Ford's novels from the central critical tradition which reads the representation of infidelity as subversive of social norms. Instead, these novels reinforce, thematically and formally, the legal policing of infidelity. Doubt of both conjugal and narrative fidelity, then, becomes the means through which the legal policing of infidelity in the divorce court is covertly extended in the novel.
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The judicial process for suspected adultery in Israel and the ancient Near EastBruce, Joel C. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Th. M.)--Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, 1998. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 80-87).
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Islam, desires, and intimate relations in an ethnic context : exploration of extramarital relationships among the Hui in Western ChinaNiu, Xuan, 牛璇 January 2013 (has links)
While extramarital affairs and bao ernai have gained notoriety in Chinese society, the phenomena of xiaosan and ernai have been explosive in academic and legal spheres. Yet, these social phenomena among ethnic minority groups in China are unknown. This study is the first to explore the experiences of extramarital relations outside official marriage among the Hui ethnic group in China. The extramarital relations in the specific dual (Han/Hui) cultural context are interpreted and understood diversely due to the interplay among a host of conditioning factors –interests, beliefs, norms, legal codes, moral sanctions.
By using the snowball sampling method, this study has deployed in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with 41 Hui men and women living in either the capital or in a the small town oin Qinghai Province in western China. This thesis examines the way in which Islamic religious values are played out in the context of Chinese law and extramarital relations. It also examines why, given the Hui knowledge of their religious and ethnic position, the Hui engage in extramarital affairs outside official marriage. Thus, it seeks to understand the Hui with respect to their intimacy and sexual relations both within and outside official marriage in contemporary China.
This study argues that, in the local context, the Hui preserve their religious beliefs and Islamic values to differentiate themselves from other ethnic groups. Islam is a key marker of their ethnicity, functioning as religious law to culturally validate their behavior. Local knowledge of legal pluralism enables the Hui to act defiantly, despite the state’s disapproval of their practices of extramarital intimacy and sex. The interaction between the state and customary law is under the unilateral control of the state. Instead of coexisting, this legal unilateralization shows that customary law usually gives way to state law wherever they intersect. As a result, the interplay of the two legal cultures – that of the Chinese state and that of Islam – produces crime, but also makes extramarital relationships in the Hui context possible.
I argue that Islamic beliefs cannot fully explain the individualism and subjectivity of Muslims in the context of extramarital practices, especially within a transforming China and a globalizing economy. The Hui articulate and negotiate their multiple affective, sexual, and material desires to raise their self-awareness of aspirations and construe their autonomy and self-representation in order to justify their behavior. Individual desires also play a pivotal role in interpreting their practices, and are in turn played out in the intersection of intimacy, gender, ethnicity, social status, and age.
The interplay of ethnicity and desires helps us to better understand these experiences in a cultural context that includes increased ethnic consciousness among the Hui and the emergence of varied desires among them within desiring China. / published_or_final_version / Sociology / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Representations of the wife in the Sidney circle, 1593-1621 : the Countesse of Pembrokes Arcadia to the Countesse of Mountgomeries UraniaMoody, Joanna January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Staging morality: studies in the "Lex Iulia de Adulteriis" of 18 BCE.Deminion, Mary Alana 02 June 2011 (has links)
The lex Iulia de adulteriis of 18 BCE, which for the first time made adultery a
criminal offence and created a standing court, was touted by the Augustan regime as a
return to the moral customs of the Republican past. However, the new reform in fact
represented a significant shift away from the traditional authority of the Roman
paterfamilias to punish transgressions privately at his discretion and towards the legal
power of the emperor and Senate to define and regulate morality on a public scale. Using
a variety of primary source evidence, I explore the provisions of the adultery law and
place the resulting criminal trials within the context of public staging of the Roman
aristocracy. In this way, the adultery law forms part of a larger trend of elite moral
regulation becoming public spectacle. / Graduate
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Gender differences in jealousy : the innate module theory reconsidered /Harris, Christine R. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, San Diego, 1998. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 140-147).
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[Paragraph] 825 des bürgerlichen Gesetzbuchs /Lyncker, Richard, January 1901 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Marburg, 1901. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [iii]).
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