In a major reframing of assumptions that illegitimacy was experienced only among the poor, this volume tells the stories of individuals from across the socio-economic scale, including children of royalty, physicians and lawyers, servants and agricultural labourers. It demonstrates that the stigma of illegitimacy operated along a spectrum, varying according to the type of parental relationship, the child's race, gender, and socio-economic status. Financial resources and the class-based ideals of parenthood or family life had a significant impact on how families reacted to illegitimacy. Class became more important over the eighteenth century, under the influence of Enlightenment ideals of tolerance, sensibility, and redemption. The child of sin was now recast as a pitiable object of charity, but this applied only to those who could fit narrow parameters of genteel tragedy. This vivid investigation of the meaning of illegitimacy gets to the heart of powerful inequalities in families, communities, and the state.
Kate Gibson is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in History at the University of Manchester. She is a social historian of family, gender, and sexuality in eighteenth-century Britain, with a particular interest in the relationship between family and social inequality. She studied history at the Universities of Oxford, York, and Sheffield, where she completed a PhD in 2018 funded by the Wolfson foundation. She has held fellowships at the University of Manchester, the University of Edinburgh, the Royal Archives, and the Huntington Library, California.