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"Three hundred years ago in Sweden, if a man and his late wife’s sister had sex they ran the risk of being executed. The relationship was defined as an incestuous one, and reprieves were rare. Today, Swedish legislation is among the most liberal in the world. How can such a radical change be accounted for? The earliest prohibitions against incest came from the Bible, which is why biological kinship and kinship based on marriage were held to be equivalent. Consequently, incest prohibitions around 1700 covered many more relationship categories than exist today. Right up to the late nineteenth century, most incest crimes corresponded to voluntary unions between two adults who were not related by blood. Analysing both incest crimes and applications for dispensation to marry from 1680 to 1940, this book reveals the norms underpinning Swedish society’s shifting attitudes to incestuous relations, while considering developments in relation to other European countries. Making a remarkable contribution to social and legal history, 'Incest in Sweden' reveals that, while the debate on incest has historically been dominated by religious, moral and – in due course – medical notions, the values that actually determined the outcome of incest cases were frequently of a quite different character." -- Publisher..
Incest --- History. --- Law and legislation --- Religious aspects. --- incest --- incest taboo --- kinship --- marriage applications --- family hierarchy --- family history --- cultural history
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"Three hundred years ago in Sweden, if a man and his late wife’s sister had sex they ran the risk of being executed. The relationship was defined as an incestuous one, and reprieves were rare. Today, Swedish legislation is among the most liberal in the world. How can such a radical change be accounted for? The earliest prohibitions against incest came from the Bible, which is why biological kinship and kinship based on marriage were held to be equivalent. Consequently, incest prohibitions around 1700 covered many more relationship categories than exist today. Right up to the late nineteenth century, most incest crimes corresponded to voluntary unions between two adults who were not related by blood. Analysing both incest crimes and applications for dispensation to marry from 1680 to 1940, this book reveals the norms underpinning Swedish society’s shifting attitudes to incestuous relations, while considering developments in relation to other European countries. Making a remarkable contribution to social and legal history, 'Incest in Sweden' reveals that, while the debate on incest has historically been dominated by religious, moral and – in due course – medical notions, the values that actually determined the outcome of incest cases were frequently of a quite different character." -- Publisher..
Incest --- History. --- Law and legislation --- Religious aspects. --- incest --- incest taboo --- kinship --- marriage applications --- family hierarchy --- family history --- cultural history
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"Three hundred years ago in Sweden, if a man and his late wife’s sister had sex they ran the risk of being executed. The relationship was defined as an incestuous one, and reprieves were rare. Today, Swedish legislation is among the most liberal in the world. How can such a radical change be accounted for? The earliest prohibitions against incest came from the Bible, which is why biological kinship and kinship based on marriage were held to be equivalent. Consequently, incest prohibitions around 1700 covered many more relationship categories than exist today. Right up to the late nineteenth century, most incest crimes corresponded to voluntary unions between two adults who were not related by blood. Analysing both incest crimes and applications for dispensation to marry from 1680 to 1940, this book reveals the norms underpinning Swedish society’s shifting attitudes to incestuous relations, while considering developments in relation to other European countries. Making a remarkable contribution to social and legal history, 'Incest in Sweden' reveals that, while the debate on incest has historically been dominated by religious, moral and – in due course – medical notions, the values that actually determined the outcome of incest cases were frequently of a quite different character." -- Publisher..
Incest --- incest --- incest taboo --- kinship --- marriage applications --- family hierarchy --- family history --- cultural history --- History. --- Law and legislation --- Religious aspects.
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Das Verbot von Verwandtenehen (Inzest) stand vom 6. bis ins 11. Jahrhundert im Mittelpunkt der Gesetzgebung. Kaiser und Könige, Bischöfe und Päpste erließen immer wieder neue Regelungen zum Inzestdelikt und stellten diese Bestimmungen häufig an die Spitze von Gesetzestexten und Kodifikationen. Die Reichweite der verbotenen Verwandten wurde dabei stetig ausgedehnt. Im 11. Jahrhundert war es kaum möglich, Ehen zu schließen, die nicht aufgrund des Inzestverbots angefochten werden konnten. Die Sorge um die Gültigkeit von Eheschließungen beschäftigte insbesondere den Adel, da mit der Illegitimität der Kinder der soziale Status auf das Spiel gesetzt wurde.Über dieses einzigartige Phänomen wird in der historischen, ethnologischen und soziologischen Forschung eine intensive Diskussion geführt. Dieses Buch zeichnet die radikale Ausdehnung der Ehehindernisse erstmals epochenübergreifend und transkulturell nach. Es wird die These aufgestellt, dass die Entstehungsbedingungen dieser "Obsession" im Funktionswandel von Gesetzgebung und in den Reaktionen von Königen, Kaisern und Bischöfen auf den Verlust antiker Staatlichkeit zu suchen sind. Die ausgedehnten Inzestverbote sollten die Etablierung überregionaler Heiratsmärkte herbeiführen und dadurch der Integration von Großreichen dienen.
Incest --- Inceste --- Law and legislation --- Droit --- Domestic relations -- Law and legislation. --- Support (Domestic relations). --- Ethnic & Race Studies --- Consanguinity (Canon law) --- Canon law --- Sex crimes --- Sexual intercourse --- Consanguinity --- History. --- Catholic Church --- Christianity. --- History of Law. --- Incest Taboo. --- Late Antiquity. --- Middle Ages.
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This monumental study of medieval law and sexual conduct explores the origin and develpment of the Christian church's sex law and the systems of belief upon which that law rested. Focusing on the Church's own legal system of canon law, James A. Brundage offers a comprehensive history of legal doctrines-covering the millennium from A.D. 500 to 1500-concerning a wide variety of sexual behavior, including marital sex, adultery, homosexuality, concubinage, prostitution, masturbation, and incest. His survey makes strikingly clear how the system of sexual control in a world we have half-forgotten has shaped the world in which we live today. The regulation of marriage and divorce as we know it today, together with the outlawing of bigamy and polygamy and the imposition of criminal sanctions on such activities as sodomy, fellatio, cunnilingus, and bestiality, are all based in large measure upon ideas and beliefs about sexual morality that became law in Christian Europe in the Middle Ages. "Brundage's book is consistently learned, enormously useful, and frequently entertaining. It is the best we have on the relationships between theological norms, legal principles, and sexual practice."-Peter Iver Kaufman, Church History
Law, Medieval --- Sex and law --- Sex crimes --- Sex --- History. --- Religious aspects --- Christianity --- 347.6 <09> --- -#GROL:SEMI-241.64*9 --- 347.6 <09> Familierecht: geschiedenis --- Familierecht: geschiedenis --- Law and sex --- Sexualité et droit --- Crimes sexuels --- #GROL:SEMI-241.64*9 --- 241.64 --- 392.6 --- Gender (Sex) --- Human beings --- Human sexuality --- Sex (Gender) --- Sexual behavior --- Sexual practices --- Sexuality --- Sexology --- Abuse, Sexual --- Sex offenses --- Sexual abuse --- Sexual crimes --- Sexual delinquency --- Sexual offenses --- Sexual violence --- Crime --- Prostitution --- 241.64 Theologische ethiek: seksuele ethiek --- Theologische ethiek: seksuele ethiek --- 392.6 Seksualiteit. Seksueel leven. Concubinaat. Samenwonen. Prostitutie. Erotiek. Seksuele gebruiken. Liefdeskunst --- Seksualiteit. Seksueel leven. Concubinaat. Samenwonen. Prostitutie. Erotiek. Seksuele gebruiken. Liefdeskunst --- History --- Religious aspects&delete& --- Christianity&delete& --- History of the law --- History of civilization --- anno 500-1499 --- Europe --- Sexualité --- Droit médiéval --- Histoire --- Aspect religieux --- Christianisme --- Law [Medieval ] --- Law and legislation --- Sex and law - Europe - History --- Sex crimes - Europe - History --- Sex - Religious aspects - Christianity - History --- Law, Medieval - History --- legal issues, litigation, lawyer, sex, sexuality, christian, christianity, faith, belief, religion, religious studies, time period, era, middle ages, european, western, sexual conduct, origin, development, church, canon, system, behavior, marital, adultery, homosexuality, concubine, prostitute, prostitution, masturbation, incest, taboo, control, regulation, theology, theological. --- SEXUALITE ET DROIT --- CRIMES SEXUELS --- SEXE --- DROIT MEDIEVAL --- EUROPE --- HISTOIRE --- ASPECT RELIGIEUX --- CHRISTIANISME
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Essays on aspects of analytical therapy, specifically the transference, abreaction, and dream analysis. Contains an additional essay, "The Realities of Practical Psychotherapy," found among Jung's posthumous papers.
Psychotherapy. --- Therapeutics, Suggestive. --- Transference (Psychology) --- Emotions --- Psychoanalysis --- Psychotherapy --- Suggestive therapeutics --- Hypnotism --- Therapeutics, Physiological --- Mental healing --- Mesmerism --- Psychagogy --- Therapy (Psychotherapy) --- Mental illness --- Clinical sociology --- Mental health counseling --- Treatment --- Abreaction. --- Adlerian. --- Albertus Magnus. --- Allusion. --- Analogy. --- Analytical psychology. --- Archetype. --- Attitude (psychology). --- Aurora consurgens. --- Axiom of Maria. --- Barbara Hannah. --- Bibliography. --- Catharsis. --- Certainty. --- Christian mysticism. --- Chthonic. --- Consciousness. --- Consummation. --- Criticism. --- Determination. --- Deus. --- Dissociation (psychology). --- Edition (book). --- Editorial. --- Essays (Montaigne). --- Explanation. --- Extrasensory perception. --- Feeling. --- Filius philosophorum. --- Goethe's Faust. --- Hermaphroditus. --- Hermes Trismegistus. --- Hypnosis. --- Illustration. --- Incest taboo. --- Incest. --- Indication (medicine). --- Individuation. --- Inferiority complex. --- Institution. --- Intellectualism. --- Interpersonal relationship. --- James Strachey. --- Lecture. --- Libido. --- Medical diagnosis. --- Medical psychology. --- Mutus Liber. --- Neurosis. --- Neuroticism. --- Nigredo. --- Nixie (postal). --- Pathology. --- Personality. --- Phenomenon. --- Philosopher. --- Philosophy. --- Phobia. --- Physician. --- Potentiality and actuality. --- Prejudice. --- Prima materia. --- Proposition. --- Psyche (psychology). --- Psychiatry. --- Psychoanalysis. --- Psychology and Alchemy. --- Psychology. --- Psychopathology. --- Reality. --- Rebis. --- Result. --- Rosicrucianism. --- Scholasticism. --- Secrecy (book). --- Secretum. --- Self-criticism. --- Sigmund Freud. --- Spirituality. --- Sublimation (psychology). --- Suffering. --- Suggestion. --- Symptom. --- The Collected Works of C. G. Jung. --- The First Man. --- The Other Hand. --- The Philosopher. --- The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud. --- Theory. --- Thing (assembly). --- Thought. --- Tincture (heraldry). --- Transference neurosis. --- Transference. --- Uncertainty. --- Unconsciousness. --- Understanding. --- Uterus. --- Writing.
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