Marital Power Exemplified in Mrs. Packard's Trial, and Self-Defence from the Charge of Insanity
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About This Book
A first-person account recounts the author's forced confinement in a state asylum after her husband and community members labeled her insane for holding religious opinions at odds with local orthodoxy. It traces her abduction, three years of institutionalization, release by writ of habeas corpus, a jury trial that affirmed her sanity, and a subsequent period of imprisonment at home. The text presents trial testimony, corrections of false reports, and personal narrative alongside explicit appeals for legal reform. Central concerns include marital authority over wives, religious freedom, the medicalization of dissent, and the need for laws that protect married women's civil rights.
About the Author
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