S. Schafer, BETWEEN PATERNAL RIGHT AND THE DANGEROUS MOTHER - READING PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY FRENCH CIVIL JUSTICE, Journal of family history, 23(2), 1998, pp. 173-189
With the enactment of the law of 25 July 1889 on the divestiture of pa
ternal authority, French civil courts were for the first time allowed
to divest parents they deemed ''morally dangerous'' of all rights over
their children. These rights were widely perceived as belonging to fa
thers alone, in accordance with the provisions of Napoleonic civil law
. Although the masculine foundation of parental rights appeared indisp
utable, the law's definition of moral danger was extremely ambiguous.
This ambiguity was most apparent in the instance of poor single women.
In making cases about morally dangerous mothers, authorities construc
ted narratives that reconfigured gendered conventions defining the dis
tribution of authority and responsibility in the family. Only through
these narrative reworkings could magistrates transform legislation cen
tered on the codified authority of the male head of household into an
effective means of regulating a feminine parental power that had no re
cognized status in nineteenth-century civil law.