Divorce, Bureaucracy, and Emotional Frontiers: Marital Dissolution in Late Nineteenth Century Copenhagen

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Abstract

Through a reading of administrative separation and divorce cases from late nineteenth-century Denmark, this article examines the emotional practices of separating couples interacting with the state bureaucracy. The argument is that, unlike in other European countries where achieving divorce depended on faultfinding, the Danish law, the bureaucratic procedures, and the state officials, who administered them, promoted polite emotional practices of divorce. While some couples easily met these standards, others encountered an emotional frontier and struggled to align their affective behavior with the emotional-legal logic of the law. The analysis shows a delicate dialectic between emotional practices and social class.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Family History
Volume42
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)81
Number of pages95
ISSN0363-1990
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2017

Keywords

  • Faculty of Humanities

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