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- Title
Child Sexual Abuse and Medical Expertise in Nineteenth-Century France.
- Authors
CAGE, E. CLAIRE
- Abstract
Child sexual abuse was a prevalent problem that appeared before the courts with dramatically increasing frequency in nineteenth-century France. During this period medical experts played a much more influential role in the courts; however, those summoned to intervene in child sexual assault cases not only bolstered but also undermined efforts to bring offenders to justice. Many doctors who could not detect physical traces of sexual abuse concluded that the assault had not occurred and that the child's accusation was false. Furthermore, doctors routinely cast moral judgments on those identified as victims of sexual abuse. The understandings of childhood innocence that engendered new efforts to combat child sexual abuse were called into question by the simultaneous rise of medicolegal experts, whose frequent negative findings led many to discount accusations of abuse and to maintain that children, particularly girls and working-class children, were not as innocent as they seemed.
- Subjects
CHILD sexual abuse; 19TH century French history; SEX offenders; SEXUAL abuse victims; INNOCENCE (Psychology)
- Publication
French Historical Studies, 2019, Vol 42, Issue 3, p391
- ISSN
0016-1071
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1215/00161071-7558315