
Disobedient Wives
Marriage, Madness, and Control in the Victorian Era
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This title uses virtual voice narration
Locked doors. Broken vows. Women branded “mad” for defying their husbands.
In Victorian Britain and America, lunacy law became a weapon of silence. A wife who spoke too boldly could be signed away by a husband’s word, shut behind asylum walls, and erased from public life. But some women fought back.
This gripping true history reveals:
• Scandalous courtroom battles that shocked Parliament and the press.
• Georgina Weldon’s flamboyant crusade, turning her near-confinement into a public spectacle.
• Elizabeth Packard’s defiance, transforming her own imprisonment into a movement that changed the law.
• Louisa Lowe’s pamphlets and petitions, sober and relentless, that forced Parliament to listen.
Through pamphlets, lawsuits, and newspapers, these women turned private misery into a public reckoning. Their fight exposed how medicine, law, and patriarchy conspired to control wives—and how outrage, scandal, and persistence cracked that silence.
Provocative, riveting, and unflinching, this book uncovers the battles respectable society tried to bury.