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Faith in Exposure

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Recent legal history in the United States reveals a hardening tendency to treat religious freedom and sexual and reproductive freedom as competing, even opposing, claims on public life. They are un...
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  • 20 September 2022
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Recent legal history in the United States reveals a hardening tendency to treat religious freedom and sexual and reproductive freedom as competing, even opposing, claims on public life. They are united, though, by the fact that both are rooted in our culture’s understanding of privacy. Faith in Exposure shows how, over the course of the nineteenth century, privacy came to encompass such contradictions—both underpinning the right to sexual and reproductive rights but also undermining them in the name of religious freedom.

Drawing on the interdisciplinary field of secular studies, Faith in Exposure brings a postsecular orientation to the historical emergence of modern privacy. The book explains this emergence through two interlocking stories. The first examines the legal and cultural connection of religion with the private sphere, showing how privacy became a moral concept that informs how we debate the right to be shielded from state interference, as well as who will be afforded or denied this protection. This conflation of religion with privacy gave rise, the book argues, to a “secular sensibility” that was especially invested in authenticity and the exposure of hypocrisy in others.

The second story examines the development of this “secular sensibility” of privacy through nineteenth-century novels. The preoccupation of the novel form with private life, and especially its dependence on revelations of private desire and sexual secrets, made it the perfect vehicle for suggesting that exposure might be synonymous with morality itself. Each chapter places key authors into wider contexts of popular fiction and periodical press debates. From fears over religious infidelity to controversies over what constituted a modern marriage and conspiracy theories about abolitionists, these were the contests, Justine S. Murison argues, that helped privacy emerge as both a sensibility and a right in modern, secular America.

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Price: $55.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Early American Studies
Publication Date: 20 September 2022
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781512823516
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / American / General, HISTORY / United States / 19th Century, RELIGION / History
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Murison’s book is not just relevant but urgent...Faith in Exposure is an accomplished work of literary history. But
perhaps its most striking payoff for an American reader right now is its account of how the conceptualization of privacy in the nineteenth-century United States shaped religious freedom and reproductive freedom into equal and opposite claims.

"
Justine S. Murison is Associate Professor of English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and author of The Politics of Anxiety in Nineteenth-Century American Literature.

Introduction. Our Faith in Exposure

Chapter 1. Infidelity

Chapter 2. Matrimony

Chapter 3. Nudity

Chapter 4. Conspiracy

Chapter 5. Hypocrisy

Chapter 6. Secrecy

Epilogue. The Ends of Privacy

Notes

Index

Acknowledgments