The Good Wife Access

Legal reforms in the 19th century (Married Women’s Property Acts) began dismantling coverture, but the cultural script persisted. Even after no-fault divorce laws in the 1970s, the "good wife" remained a regulatory ideal. A woman who divorced was often stigmatized as selfish; a woman who stayed with an abusive or adulterous husband was praised as "standing by her man"—a phrase that reached its grotesque apotheosis in the political spectacles of the 1980s and 1990s (e.g., Hillary Clinton's "stand by our man" comment in 1992, later reframed). The good wife, it seems, is always expected to forgive the unforgivable. Before television, the stage and the novel interrogated the good wife. Shakespeare’s Hermione in The Winter’s Tale is the archetypal innocent good wife: falsely accused of adultery, she endures public shame, imprisonment, and the apparent death of her son. Her "goodness" is static, patient, and ultimately miraculous (she returns as a statue come to life). But Hermione does not act; she is acted upon. Her goodness is endurance.

From the pilot, Alicia’s "goodness" is strategic. She returns to work as a litigator after thirteen years as a stay-at-home mother, not out of feminist liberation but out of economic necessity (Peter’s assets are frozen). She remains married to Peter—publicly—because her image as the forgiving wife is a political asset for his reelection. As her mother-in-law, Jackie, tells her: "You’re a politician’s wife now. You stand by him. That’s the job." The "job" metaphor is crucial: the good wife is a role , not an essence. Alicia performs wifely devotion while simultaneously building her own career and beginning a clandestine emotional affair with her former lover, investigator Jason Crouse, and a complex intellectual affair with her law partner, Will Gardner. The good wife

This paper will proceed in three parts. First, it will trace the historical and legal construction of the good wife from coverture to no-fault divorce. Second, it will examine literary antecedents, from Shakespeare's Hermione to Ibsen's Nora Helmer. Third, it will offer a close reading of The Good Wife (2009–2016) as a cultural text that deconstructs and reassembles the archetype for the neoliberal era. The archetype of the good wife is not merely metaphorical; it is encoded in law. Under the English common law doctrine of coverture , imported to America, a married woman ( femes covert ) had no independent legal existence. Her identity was "covered" by her husband. William Blackstone famously wrote: "The very being or legal existence of the woman is suspended during the marriage, or at least is incorporated and consolidated into that of the husband." In this framework, a "good wife" was one who accepted this civil death. Legal reforms in the 19th century (Married Women’s