Prostitution and the Victorians

by Trevor Fisher

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Description

Victorian Britain has long been viewed as a tightly buttoned society in sexual matters. In fact, female prostitution, or the Great Social Evil as contemporaries called it, was endemic and the persistence of the phenomenon infuriated anti-vice campaigners, while perplexing social reformers. The issue being debated was whether society should tolerate prostitution as an inevitable phenomenon which should be regulated in the public interest -- the public health position -- or suppressed as an show more intolerable evil -- the moral purity position. The evidence presented here clearly indicates that prostitution was a serious issue for serious Victorians. The popular images of a polite and respectable people, or a hypocritical and repressive society which did not practice what it preached, cannot be substantiated. Moreover, it is surprising how many of the debates covered in this book are still with us today. show less

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Trevor Fisher is Lecturer in History at Newcastle College.

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, History, General Nonfiction, Sociology, Politics and Government
DDC/MDS
306.740942Society, government, & cultureSocial sciences, sociology & anthropologySocial Behavior - Dating, Marriage, DivorceSexual relationsSex work and prostitutionStandard subdivisionsHistory, geographic treatment, biographyEurope
LCC
HQ186 .A5 .F57Social sciencesThe family. Marriage, Women and SexualityThe Family. Marriage. WomenSexual lifeProstitution
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17
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1,449,021
Rating
(5.00)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
3