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Henpecked Husbands Henpecked Husbands
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Arabella’s Complaint Arabella’s Complaint
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A Dialogue Between a Southern Delegate and His Spouse A Dialogue Between a Southern Delegate and His Spouse
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Notes Notes
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10 Of Eloquence “Manly” and “Monstrous”: The Henpecked Husband in Revolutionary Political Debate, 1774–1775
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Published:January 2011
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Abstract
This chapter examines the figure of the henpecked husband in two satirical publications. The first is A Dialogue Between a Southern Delegate and His Spouse on His Return from the Grand Continental Congress—a romping verse printed as an octavo pamphlet in the late fall of 1774, presumably by the New York newspaperman James Rivington—which invited readers to eavesdrop on one congressman's querulous homecoming. The second is “Arabella's Complaint of the Congress,” a short letter published in the Pennsylvania Magazine, or American Monthly Museum in September 1775, which artfully utilized henpeckery to promote the cause of liberty. Both publications help to illuminate the mobilizing power of gender in political debate—that is, the power of gendered rhetoric to rally individuals in support of, or in opposition to, political leaders and their platforms, in this case the Continental Congress and its Articles of Association.
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