
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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Special Damage Narrowly Restricted Women
- English common law required women to prove 'special damage' for sexual slander, narrowly defined as cancellation of an imminent marriage.
- That requirement left most women unable to sue for ruinous sexual accusations in common law courts.
Mary Smith’s Defining New Jersey Case
- Mary Smith sued for slander in New Jersey (1788) after neighbors accused her of carrying a bastard child.
- Chief Justice Kinsey broke with English precedent and allowed sexual slander suits without special damage, sparking reform.
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.

