Incest and Influence: The Private Life of Bourgeois England

Incest and Influence: The Private Life of Bourgeois England

by Adam Kuper
Incest and Influence: The Private Life of Bourgeois England

Incest and Influence: The Private Life of Bourgeois England

by Adam Kuper

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Overview

Like many gentlemen of his time, Charles Darwin married his first cousin. In fact, marriages between close relatives were commonplace in nineteenth-century England, and Adam Kuper argues that they played a crucial role in the rise of the bourgeoisie.

Incest and Influence shows us just how the political networks of the eighteenth-century aristocracy were succeeded by hundreds of in-married bourgeois clans—in finance and industry, in local and national politics, in the church, and in intellectual life. In a richly detailed narrative, Kuper deploys his expertise as an anthropologist to analyze kin marriages among the Darwins and Wedgwoods, in Quaker and Jewish banking families, and in the Clapham Sect and their descendants over four generations, ending with a revealing account of the Bloomsbury Group, the most eccentric product of English bourgeois endogamy.

These marriage strategies were the staple of novels, and contemporaries were obsessed with them. But there were concerns. Ideas about incest were in flux as theological doctrines were challenged. For forty years Victorian parliaments debated whether a man could marry his deceased wife’s sister. Cousin marriage troubled scientists, including Charles Darwin and his cousin Francis Galton, provoking revolutionary ideas about breeding and heredity.

This groundbreaking study brings out the connection between private lives, public fortunes, and the history of imperial Britain.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674035898
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 10/30/2009
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 974,197
Product dimensions: 5.80(w) x 8.30(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Adam Kuper is Centennial Professor of Anthropology at the London School of Economics and Political Science and a Fellow of the British Academy.

Table of Contents

  • Prologue: Darwin’s Marriage
  • Introduction


    Part I: A Question of Incest
  1. The Romance of Incest and the Love of Cousins
  2. The Law of Incest
  3. The Science of Incest and Heredity

  4. Part II: Family Concerns
  5. The Family Business
  6. Wilberforce and the Clapham Sect
  7. Difficulties with Siblings

  8. Part III: The Intellectuals
  9. The Bourgeois Intellectuals
  10. The Bloomsbury Version

  • Coda: The End of the Line
  • Notes
  • Index

What People are Saying About This

Adam Kuper, perhaps the most original of anthropologists working in the present day, has turned from the study of African tribes to scrutinize cousin marriages and other consanguineous unions from Jane Austen's characters to the Darwin family and on throughout the great families of the Victorian era--and has come up with a startling and irresistible contribution to nineteenth-century social history.

Horace Freeland Judson

Adam Kuper, perhaps the most original of anthropologists working in the present day, has turned from the study of African tribes to scrutinize cousin marriages and other consanguineous unions from Jane Austen's characters to the Darwin family and on throughout the great families of the Victorian era--and has come up with a startling and irresistible contribution to nineteenth-century social history.

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