214 resultados para anulación matrimonial


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Mode of access: Internet.

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Purchased from Gilman, Crompond, N.Y.

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Earlier ed., 1805.

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Advertisements: p. [1]-12 (1st set).

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Previously published in part in the New York Evening Post, 1858-59. cf. Pref., p. iii.

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"Minority report by ... the Archbishop of York, Sir William R. Anson ... and Sir Lewis T. Dibdin ... ": p. 171-191 (of the Report)

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This article provides an analysis of R v Vollmer and Others, Australia’s most famous ‘exorcism-manslaughter’ case, in which a woman, Joan Vollmer, underwent an ‘exorcism’ performed by four people, resulting in her death. We examine how taken-for-granted distinctions were collapsed during the resulting trial - distinctions between crime and punishment, exorcism and punishment, church and state, the past and the present, law and religion, reason and unreason and between a demon and a woman. We show how the defence argument for the reality of demonic possession normalized the bizarre, while simultaneously exoticizing the mundane or ‘traditional’ criminal case involving a husband defendant and a dead wife. The apparent assumption on the part of the police and the media that this case was bizarre serves to veil the fact of its relative ordinariness. A wife is killed, and the lethal punishing violence inflicted on her body downplayed, to be reinterpreted in the legal context as somehow a consequence of something she herself precipitated. Our analysis of the Vollmer case provides a novel perspective on that always intriguing conundrum of crime and punishment.