Femininity, Freedom, and Romantic Choice: Women's Agency in Relationship History
MTA
Stories of women's strategies, constraints, and reforms in love and marriage
2nd Edition
"Femininity, Freedom, and Romantic Choice: Women's Agency in Relationship History" comprehensively explores how women have navigated love and marriage across diverse historical and cultural contexts, often under unequal conditions. The book challenges simplistic narratives of linear liberation, instead presenting a nuanced history of strategies, constraints, and reforms. It examines how women's agency in romantic choices has been shaped by the interplay of legal frameworks (like coverture, canon law, and civil codes), economic pressures (dowry, bridewealth, waged work), cultural scripts (media representations, respectability norms), and social movements (suffrage, feminism, LGBTQ+ rights).
The book traces this complex journey from antiquity, where marriage was primarily an alliance between households, through medieval regimes where the Church asserted control over consent and indissolubility, and into the early modern era marked by patriarchal common law and coverture. It highlights how imperial expansion and industrialization introduced new forms of governance over intimate lives, often reinforcing racial and class hierarchies, even as urbanization and waged labor offered women new, albeit precarious, paths to independence. Subsequent chapters delve into critical shifts such as the rise of modern dating, the revolutionary impact of contraception and reproductive control, and the arduous fight for divorce rights and safety from domestic violence.
Crucially, the book emphasizes the intersectional nature of women's experiences, showing how race, class, religion, caste, and sexuality profoundly influenced romantic choices and access to agency. It dedicates specific attention to the histories of love across lines (interracial, interfaith, cross-caste unions) and the often-hidden relational histories of lesbian, bisexual, and transgender women. The influence of media in shaping desire, the impact of migration on marital negotiations, and the evolution of personal status laws under various religious and secular systems are also explored in detail.
The narrative culminates in an examination of contemporary challenges and opportunities, including the transformative power of digital platforms, the global reach of the #MeToo movement in challenging sexual harassment, and ongoing efforts to rethink commitment, kinship, and care in the 21st century. Ultimately, the book argues that women's freedom in love is not a fixed state but an ongoing, dynamic process of negotiation and collective action, constantly adapting to new economic shocks and societal shifts, with the path toward true autonomy still being forged.
This book is designed for students and scholars of gender studies, women's history, sociology, and law who seek an intersectional, historically grounded analysis of women's agency in romantic relationships. It will particularly benefit readers interested in how legal, economic, and cultural forces interact to shape intimate life across time and place, as well as activists and policymakers working on contemporary issues of relationship equity, reproductive justice, and intimate partner violence.
January 24, 2026
78,305 words
5 hours 29 minutes
Get unlimited access to this book + all books published by MixCache.com for $11.99/month
Subscribe to MTAOr purchase this book individually below
Click to buy this ebook:
Buy Now
Full ebook will be available immediately
- read online or download as a PDF file.
$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts!
Have a question about the content? Ask our AI assistant!
Start by asking a question about "Femininity, Freedom, and Romantic Choice: Women's Agency in Relationship History"
Example: "Does this book mention William Shakespeare?"
Thinking...