Love in the Time of Victoria: Sexuality and Desire Among Working-Class Men and Women in 19th Century London
by Francoise Barret-Ducrocq
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Using firsthand documents uncovered in the archives of a London foundling hospital, Barret-Ducrocq offers a marvelously acute census of Victorian sexual and moral attitudes.Tags
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I found this book fascinating. Ducrocq takes on many Victorian stereotypes about the working classes and shows, through then-new evidence, their blatant falsehood. Some of the issues she discusses include refutations of the ideas that the poor have little sexual self-control; that their crowded living quarters eroded morality and "decency"; that they had children frivolously, without real emotional attachment to the infants; and so on.
Ducrocq relates the stories of individual working-class Victorians, pieced together from letters and hospital/orphanage records, to debunk these myths. A great read, and well translated.
Ducrocq relates the stories of individual working-class Victorians, pieced together from letters and hospital/orphanage records, to debunk these myths. A great read, and well translated.
After an exhaustive study of the meticulous records of London's Foundling Hospital, Barret-Ducrocq wrote a book about how Victorians viewed sex and its afteraffects.
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- London, England, UK
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