Intimate Relationships Across Boundaries

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African Jamaicans
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boundary crossing relationships
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Chinese Men
Chinese Migrants
Civil Marriage Laws
colonial legal frameworks
cross-cultural intimacy
East Indies
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ethnic intermarriage research
Family Books
Geographical boundaries
German Southwest Africa
German Women
global history of mixed unions
Inter-racial Marriage
intercultural marriage
Interracial Families
Interracial Intimate Relationships
Interracial Marriage
Interreligious Marriages
Intimate Relationships
Migration Regime
Mixed Marriages
Mixed Marriages Act
Mixed Race Children
Pre-marital Counseling
social stratification studies
Stewart Island
Symbolic boundaries
Van Heek
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780367751319
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 17 May 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This collection investigates intermarriage and related relationships around the world since the eighteenth century.

The contributors explore how intimate relationships challenged boundary crossings of various kinds – social, geographic, religious, ethnic. To this end, the volume considers a range of related issues: Who participated in these unions? How common were they, and in which circumstances were they practised (or banned)? Taking a global view, the book also questions some of the categories behind these relationships. For example, how did geographical boundaries – across national lines, distinctions between colonies and metropoles or metaphors of the ‘East’ and the ‘West’ – shape the treatment of intermarriage? What role have social and symbolic boundaries, such as presumed racial, religious or socio-economic divides, played? To what extent and how were those boundaries blurred in the eyes of contemporaries? Not least, how have bureaucracies and law contributed to the creation of boundaries preventing romantic unions? Intimate relationships, the contributors suggest, brought into sharp relief assumptions not only about community and culture, but also about the sanctity of the sphere of love and family.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of The History of the Family.

Julia Moses is Reader in Modern History at the University of Sheffield, UK, and co-editor of Gender & History. Works include Civilizing Marriage: Family, Nation and State in the German Empire (forthcoming); The First Modern Risk: Workplace Accidents and the Origins of European Social States (Cambridge, 2018) and Marriage, Law and Modernity (Bloomsbury, 2017).

Julia Woesthoff is associate professor at DePaul University, USA. She has published a variety of articles related to questions of intermarriage between German Christian women and foreign Muslim men in postwar West Germany.