New Books in History

Jessica Lake, "Special Damage: The Slander of Women and the Gendered History of Defamation Law" (Stanford UP, 2025)

Feb 2, 2026
Jessica Lake, senior lecturer and legal scholar of media, defamation, and privacy law, discusses the gendered history of defamation law. She traces landmark cases like Mary Smith’s 1788 suit, the rise of Slander of Women statutes across colonies and states, transnational legal circulation, and surprising links between reputation, race, and legal reform.
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ANECDOTE

Maria Lewin’s Shipboard Rumors Case

  • Maria Lewin, a free migrant's wife, sued in New South Wales (1800) after shipboard rumors of sexual misconduct and won in rudimentary colonial courts.
  • Her success reflected local class dynamics and the colony's early informal legal system.
ANECDOTE

Harriet Spencer And Employment Harm

  • Governess Harriet Spencer sued a ship's captain in New South Wales claiming sexual rumors ruined her livelihood as a governess.
  • She won at trial but lost on appeal once British common law norms, including special damage, were enforced.
INSIGHT

North Carolina’s 1808 Reform

  • North Carolina passed the first titled Slander of Women Act in 1808, removing the special damage requirement for incontinency accusations.
  • The brief statute explicitly framed protection around the 'unsullied purity' of (idealized) women, encoding gendered expectations into law.
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