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'''Nicholas L. Syrett''' is a professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and an associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, at the University of Kansas, United States. There, he is also a professor, by courtesy, in the History Department, and as of 2023, a coeditor of the ''Journal of the History of Sexuality''.  
{{Template:Ac}}'''Nicholas L. Syrett''' is a professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and an associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, at the University of Kansas, United States. There, he is also a professor, by courtesy, in the History Department, and as of 2023, a coeditor of the ''Journal of the History of Sexuality''.  


Syrett's scholarship of interest to [[MAP]]s, [[AAM]]s and their allies, concerns debates over intergenerational / age-gap or [[Youth-Adult Marriage]]. In 2016, his book ''American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States'' was published.<ref>[https://id.annas-archive.org/md5/169ed532ddcb870d9ec3fdde8d2f4482 American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States (2016)] PDF from Annas Archive</ref> One of our editorial team reviewed this work for 1st-wave MAP activist [[Thomas_O'Carroll|Tom O'Carroll]]'s blog heretictoc, focusing on an example of positively experienced age-gap marriage between [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Mayne_Reid Captain Thomas Mayne Reid] (35) and the aristocrat Elizabeth Hyde (15), who took the name Elizabeth Reid after insisting she marry Reid even if her father refused to consent to their union. The blog discusses her account of their meeting and criticizes Syrett's framing of the account.<ref>[https://heretictoc.com/2021/01/13/should-a-child-ever-get-married/ Should a child ever get married?]</ref> Syrett explicitly condemns the practice of unlawful age-gap marriage. His 2016 book points out how "earlier Americans had a functional, rather than chronological, understanding of childhood" (p. 4), and helps to explain why such marriages could be functional and [[Accounts_and_Testimonies|experienced positively]] by those involved, as they were not [[Research:_Secondary_Harm|heavily stigmatized]] or assumed / expected to be inherently psychologically harmful.
Syrett's scholarship of interest to [[MAP]]s, [[AAM]]s and their allies, concerns debates over intergenerational / age-gap or [[Youth-Adult Marriage]]. In 2016, his book ''American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States'' was published.<ref>[https://id.annas-archive.org/md5/169ed532ddcb870d9ec3fdde8d2f4482 American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States (2016)] PDF from Annas Archive</ref> One of our editorial team reviewed this work for 1st-wave MAP activist [[Thomas_O'Carroll|Tom O'Carroll]]'s blog heretictoc, focusing on an example of positively experienced age-gap marriage between [[Wikipedia:Thomas Mayne Reid|Captain Thomas Mayne Reid]] (35) and the aristocrat Elizabeth Hyde (15). Hyde took the name Elizabeth Reid after insisting she marry Reid, even if her father refused to consent to their union. The blog discusses her account of their meeting and criticizes Syrett's framing of the account.<ref>[https://heretictoc.com/2021/01/13/should-a-child-ever-get-married/ Should a child ever get married?]</ref> While Syrett explicitly condemns the practice of unlawful age-gap marriage, his work discusses the changing history of "age" as a category itself - how we relate to this category - and gives reasons for how and why it was not as important in the past. His 2016 book argues that "''earlier Americans had a functional, rather than chronological, understanding of childhood''" (p. 4), and helps to explain why such marriages could be functional and [[Accounts_and_Testimonies|experienced positively]] by those involved, as they were not [[Research:_Secondary_Harm|heavily stigmatized]] or assumed / expected to be inherently psychologically harmful.


Syrett's work is particularly notable for historicizing the concept of age, arguing, as historian Alex Lichtenstein summarized, that age “is not a neutral fact, but a vector of power through which officials and ordinary people construct and contest the boundaries of citizenship and belonging”.<ref>[https://www.historians.org/publications-and-directories/perspectives-on-history/april-2020/age-as-a-category-of-historical-analysis-in-the-april-issue-of-the-emamerican-historical-review/em Lichtenstein on Syrett]</ref>
Syrett's work is particularly notable for historicizing the concept of age, arguing, as historian Alex Lichtenstein summarized, that age "''is not a neutral fact, but a vector of power through which officials and ordinary people construct and contest the boundaries of citizenship and belonging''".<ref>[https://www.historians.org/publications-and-directories/perspectives-on-history/april-2020/age-as-a-category-of-historical-analysis-in-the-april-issue-of-the-emamerican-historical-review/em Lichtenstein on Syrett]</ref>


Some of Syrett's publications are listed with links below, and we recommend the 2020 open-access introduction to the special issue on ''Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History'',<ref>https://www.berghahnjournals.com/view/journals/historical-reflections/46/1/historical-reflections.46.issue-1.xml</ref> co-authored with [[Rachel Hope Cleves]] and [[Averil Earls]], and his  chapter on "Age" in the 2020 ''Routledge History of American Sexuality''.<ref>Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., ''The Routledge History of American Sexuality'' (21-31). New York: Routledge. ([https://library.lol/main/DAF99CBC721CAA20CC826BDF362E80F7 Libgen PDF link]). ([https://id.annas-archive.org/md5/daf99cbc721caa20cc826bdf362e80f7 Anna archive PDF link]).</ref>
Some of Syrett's publications are listed with links below, and we recommend the 2020 open-access introduction to the special issue on ''Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History'',<ref>[https://www.berghahnjournals.com/view/journals/historical-reflections/46/1/historical-reflections.46.issue-1.xml Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History]</ref> co-authored with [[Rachel Hope Cleves]] and [[Averill Earls]], and his  chapter on "Age" in the 2020 ''Routledge History of American Sexuality''.<ref>Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., ''The Routledge History of American Sexuality'' (21-31). New York: Routledge. ([https://library.lol/main/DAF99CBC721CAA20CC826BDF362E80F7 Libgen PDF link]). ([https://id.annas-archive.org/md5/daf99cbc721caa20cc826bdf362e80f7 Anna archive PDF link]).</ref>


==Selected publications==
==Selected publications==
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*Syrett, Nicholas L. (2021). "Age Disparity, Marriage, and the Gendering of Heterosexuality." In Rebecca L. Davis & Michele Mitchell, eds., ''Heterosexual Histories'' (96-119). New York: New York University Press.<ref>Syrett, Nicholas L. (2021). "Age Disparity, Marriage, and the Gendering of Heterosexuality." In Rebecca L. Davis & Michele Mitchell, eds., ''Heterosexual Histories'' (96-119). New York: New York University Press. ([http://library.lol/main/96F09FD48123B0F3CFEC5422C95C2033 Libgen PDF link]). ([https://id.annas-archive.org/md5/18d41c806598750de4c311bab48f4cf8 Annas Archive PDF link]).</ref>
*Syrett, Nicholas L. (2021). "Age Disparity, Marriage, and the Gendering of Heterosexuality." In Rebecca L. Davis & Michele Mitchell, eds., ''Heterosexual Histories'' (96-119). New York: New York University Press.<ref>Syrett, Nicholas L. (2021). "Age Disparity, Marriage, and the Gendering of Heterosexuality." In Rebecca L. Davis & Michele Mitchell, eds., ''Heterosexual Histories'' (96-119). New York: New York University Press. ([http://library.lol/main/96F09FD48123B0F3CFEC5422C95C2033 Libgen PDF link]). ([https://id.annas-archive.org/md5/18d41c806598750de4c311bab48f4cf8 Annas Archive PDF link]).</ref>


*Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Introduction" to "Sex Across the Ages: Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History." ''Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques'' 46 (1): 1-12.
*Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Introduction" to "Sex Across the Ages: Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History." ''Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques'' 46 (1): 1-12.<ref>[https://www.berghahnjournals.com/view/journals/historical-reflections/46/1/historical-reflections.46.issue-1.xml Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History]</ref>


*Field, Corinne T. and Nicholas L. Syrett (2020). "Introduction," to "Chronological Age: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis." ''American Historical Review'' 125 (2): 370-384.  
*Field, Corinne T. and Nicholas L. Syrett (2020). "Introduction," to "Chronological Age: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis." ''American Historical Review'' 125 (2): 370-384.<ref>[https://academic.oup.com/ahr/article-abstract/125/2/371/5817117?redirectedFrom=fulltext American Historical Review discussion].</ref>


*Field, Corinne T. and Nicholas L. Syrett (2020). "Age and the Construction of Gendered and Raced Citizenship in the United States." ''American Historical Review'', 125 (2): 438-450.
*Field, Corinne T. and Nicholas L. Syrett (2020). "Age and the Construction of Gendered and Raced Citizenship in the United States." ''American Historical Review'', 125 (2): 438-450.<ref>Ibid.</ref>


*Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., ''The Routledge History of American Sexuality'' (21-31). New York: Routledge.<ref>Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., ''The Routledge History of American Sexuality'' (21-31). New York: Routledge. ([https://library.lol/main/DAF99CBC721CAA20CC826BDF362E80F7 Libgen PDF link]). ([https://id.annas-archive.org/md5/daf99cbc721caa20cc826bdf362e80f7 Anna archive PDF link]).</ref>
*Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., ''The Routledge History of American Sexuality'' (21-31). New York: Routledge.<ref>Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., ''The Routledge History of American Sexuality'' (21-31). New York: Routledge. ([https://library.lol/main/DAF99CBC721CAA20CC826BDF362E80F7 Libgen PDF link]). ([https://id.annas-archive.org/md5/daf99cbc721caa20cc826bdf362e80f7 Anna archive PDF link]).</ref>

Latest revision as of 01:59, 30 September 2023

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Nicholas L. Syrett is a professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and an associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, at the University of Kansas, United States. There, he is also a professor, by courtesy, in the History Department, and as of 2023, a coeditor of the Journal of the History of Sexuality.

Syrett's scholarship of interest to MAPs, AAMs and their allies, concerns debates over intergenerational / age-gap or Youth-Adult Marriage. In 2016, his book American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States was published.[1] One of our editorial team reviewed this work for 1st-wave MAP activist Tom O'Carroll's blog heretictoc, focusing on an example of positively experienced age-gap marriage between Captain Thomas Mayne Reid (35) and the aristocrat Elizabeth Hyde (15). Hyde took the name Elizabeth Reid after insisting she marry Reid, even if her father refused to consent to their union. The blog discusses her account of their meeting and criticizes Syrett's framing of the account.[2] While Syrett explicitly condemns the practice of unlawful age-gap marriage, his work discusses the changing history of "age" as a category itself - how we relate to this category - and gives reasons for how and why it was not as important in the past. His 2016 book argues that "earlier Americans had a functional, rather than chronological, understanding of childhood" (p. 4), and helps to explain why such marriages could be functional and experienced positively by those involved, as they were not heavily stigmatized or assumed / expected to be inherently psychologically harmful.

Syrett's work is particularly notable for historicizing the concept of age, arguing, as historian Alex Lichtenstein summarized, that age "is not a neutral fact, but a vector of power through which officials and ordinary people construct and contest the boundaries of citizenship and belonging".[3]

Some of Syrett's publications are listed with links below, and we recommend the 2020 open-access introduction to the special issue on Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History,[4] co-authored with Rachel Hope Cleves and Averill Earls, and his chapter on "Age" in the 2020 Routledge History of American Sexuality.[5]

Selected publications

Books

  • Syrett, Nicholas L. (2016). American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.[6]

Articles and Book Chapters

  • Syrett, Nicholas L. (2023). "Youth Cultures, Sexuality, and the Persistence of the Double Standard in the Twentieth-Century United States." In James Marten, ed., Oxford Handbook of the History of Youth Culture (313-332). New York: Oxford University Press.[7]
  • Pomfret, David and Nicholas L. Syrett (2023). "Concepts of Youth." In Kristine Alexander and Simon Sleight, eds., A Cultural History of Youth in the Modern Age (19-40). London: Bloomsbury.[8]
  • Syrett, Nicholas L. (2021). "Age Disparity, Marriage, and the Gendering of Heterosexuality." In Rebecca L. Davis & Michele Mitchell, eds., Heterosexual Histories (96-119). New York: New York University Press.[9]
  • Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Introduction" to "Sex Across the Ages: Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History." Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques 46 (1): 1-12.[10]
  • Field, Corinne T. and Nicholas L. Syrett (2020). "Introduction," to "Chronological Age: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis." American Historical Review 125 (2): 370-384.[11]
  • Field, Corinne T. and Nicholas L. Syrett (2020). "Age and the Construction of Gendered and Raced Citizenship in the United States." American Historical Review, 125 (2): 438-450.[12]
  • Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., The Routledge History of American Sexuality (21-31). New York: Routledge.[13]
  • Nicholas L. Syrett (2015). "Statutory Marriage Ages and the Gendered Construction of Adulthood in the Nineteenth Century." In Field, Corinne T. and Nicholas L. Syrett, eds., Age in America: The Colonial Era to the Present. New York: New York University Press.[14]

References

  1. American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States (2016) PDF from Annas Archive
  2. Should a child ever get married?
  3. Lichtenstein on Syrett
  4. Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History
  5. Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., The Routledge History of American Sexuality (21-31). New York: Routledge. (Libgen PDF link). (Anna archive PDF link).
  6. American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States (2016) (Libgen PDF link). (Annas Archive PDF link).
  7. Product page.
  8. Pomfret, David and Nicholas L. Syrett (2023). "Concepts of Youth." In Kristine Alexander and Simon Sleight, eds., A Cultural History of Youth in the Modern Age (19-40). London: Bloomsbury. (Libgen PDF link). (Annas Archive PDF link).
  9. Syrett, Nicholas L. (2021). "Age Disparity, Marriage, and the Gendering of Heterosexuality." In Rebecca L. Davis & Michele Mitchell, eds., Heterosexual Histories (96-119). New York: New York University Press. (Libgen PDF link). (Annas Archive PDF link).
  10. Restoring Intergenerational Dynamics to Queer History
  11. American Historical Review discussion.
  12. Ibid.
  13. Syrett, Nicholas L. (2020). "Age." In Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, & David Serlin, eds., The Routledge History of American Sexuality (21-31). New York: Routledge. (Libgen PDF link). (Anna archive PDF link).
  14. Nicholas L. Syrett (2015). "Statutory Marriage Ages and the Gendered Construction of Adulthood in the Nineteenth Century." In Field, Corinne T. and Nicholas L. Syrett, eds., Age in America: The Colonial Era to the Present. New York: New York University Press. (Libgen PDF link). (Annas Archive PDF link).