A Lady’s Man

A Lady’s Man
About this book
"Three people in a marriage: a woman and two men. This was the eighteenth-century Italian aristocratic model of marriage, characterized by the presence of the cicisbeo, the official escort of another man's wife. Did this delineate a clear and brazen sexual depravity or rather a complex and refined social institution, revealing many aspects of Italian civilization in the Age of the Enlightenment? Not only was the presence of a cicisbeo part of a matrimonial, family model; it was also an important factor socially and politically. In a period in which the presence of women at parties was sought--at the theatre and in salons--the lady's escort played an essential part in promoting a couple's social life. Indeed, the company and friendship (and perhaps love) which bound a lady and her escort occurred with the knowledge and under the control of the families of the interested parties. Of course, this 'triangular' arrangement was not unproblematic. The existence of a third party posed a threat to conjugal fidelity and the legitimacy of offspring and, towards the early nineteenth century, when the ideals of Romanticism and the French Revolution were popular there was a rapid decline in the practice. For as Italy reconstructed its national identity alongside other modern European countries the image of private immorality associated with cicisbeism constituted an intolerable blemish"--Provided by publisher.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL20709320W
Subjects
Social life and customsSocial conditionsMan-woman relationshipsHistoryMarriageAristocracy (Social class)Political cultureMoral conditionsPolitics and governmentItalian National characteristicsNationalismHISTORY / GeneralHISTORY / Europe / GeneralHISTORY / Europe / ItalyHISTORY / Modern / 18th CenturySOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender StudiesLITERARY CRITICISM / European / ItalianMarriage, europe