First Name
Jennine
Last Name
Hurl-Eamon
Email
jenninehurleamon@trentu.ca
Phone
905-435-5100 ext. 5053
Location
Durham Campus, OSH 169
Campus
Peterborough
Job Title
Professor
Accreditation
B.A. (Western), M.A. (Queen's), Ph.D. (York)
Image
Home Department
Program Affiliation
Areas of Expertise
Publications
“Habits of Seduction: Accounts of Portuguese Nuns in British Officers’ Peninsular War Memoirs,” Historical Journal 58, no. 3 (September, 2015): 733-756.
“Youth in the Devil’s Service; Manhood in the King’s: Reaching Adulthood in the eighteenth-century British Army,” Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth 8, no. 2 (Spring 2015), 163-190.
“Did soldiers really enlist to desert their wives? Revisiting the martial character of marital desertion in eighteenth-century London,” Journal of British Studies 53 (April, 2014): 356-77.
“Love Tokens: Objects as Memory for Plebeian Women in Early Modern England,” in the Forum on Early Modern Women and Memory, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal 6 (2011): 181-186.
“The Fiction of Female Dependence and the Makeshift Economy of Soldiers, Sailors, and their Wives in Eighteenth-Century London,” Labor History 49 (November 2008): 481-501.
“Insights into Plebeian Marriage: Soldiers, Sailors, and their Wives in the Old Bailey Proceedings,” London Journal 30, no. 1 (2005): 22-38
“The Westminster Impostors: Impersonating Law Enforcement in Early Eighteenth-Century London,” Eighteenth-Century Studies 38 (2005): 461-483.
“Policing Male Heterosexuality: The Reformation of Manners’ Campaign Against the Brothels in Westminster, 1680-1720,” Journal of Social History 37 (Summer 2004): 1017-1035.
“Domestic Violence Prosecuted: Women Binding Over their Husbands for Assault at Westminster Quarter Sessions, 1685-1720” Journal of Family History 26, no. 4 (October, 2001): 435-454.
“’She being bigg with child is likely to miscarry’: Pregnant Women Prosecuting Assault in London, 1685-1720,” London Journal 24, no. 2 (December 1999): 18-33.
“Youth in the Devil’s Service; Manhood in the King’s: Reaching Adulthood in the eighteenth-century British Army,” Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth 8, no. 2 (Spring 2015), 163-190.
“Did soldiers really enlist to desert their wives? Revisiting the martial character of marital desertion in eighteenth-century London,” Journal of British Studies 53 (April, 2014): 356-77.
“Love Tokens: Objects as Memory for Plebeian Women in Early Modern England,” in the Forum on Early Modern Women and Memory, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal 6 (2011): 181-186.
“The Fiction of Female Dependence and the Makeshift Economy of Soldiers, Sailors, and their Wives in Eighteenth-Century London,” Labor History 49 (November 2008): 481-501.
“Insights into Plebeian Marriage: Soldiers, Sailors, and their Wives in the Old Bailey Proceedings,” London Journal 30, no. 1 (2005): 22-38
“The Westminster Impostors: Impersonating Law Enforcement in Early Eighteenth-Century London,” Eighteenth-Century Studies 38 (2005): 461-483.
“Policing Male Heterosexuality: The Reformation of Manners’ Campaign Against the Brothels in Westminster, 1680-1720,” Journal of Social History 37 (Summer 2004): 1017-1035.
“Domestic Violence Prosecuted: Women Binding Over their Husbands for Assault at Westminster Quarter Sessions, 1685-1720” Journal of Family History 26, no. 4 (October, 2001): 435-454.
“’She being bigg with child is likely to miscarry’: Pregnant Women Prosecuting Assault in London, 1685-1720,” London Journal 24, no. 2 (December 1999): 18-33.
Areas of Research
Early modern Europe, especially England, with a focus upon gender, childhood and the military; crime and criminal justice; plebeian marriage and family life.
Media Database
Yes
Media Preferences
Print
Radio