Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: The Revolt of the Women
- Part I Prostitution, Social Science, and Venereal Disease
- Part II The Contagious Diseases Acts, Regulationists, and Repealers
- Part III Two Case Studies: Plymouth and Southampton Under the Contagious Diseases Acts
- Epilog
- Notes
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: The Revolt of the Women
- Part I Prostitution, Social Science, and Venereal Disease
- Part II The Contagious Diseases Acts, Regulationists, and Repealers
- Part III Two Case Studies: Plymouth and Southampton Under the Contagious Diseases Acts
- Epilog
- Notes
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
Summary
When I began research on this project in 1970, sexuality and prostitution were only just emerging as legitimate subjects for historical inquiry. Two influential works, Steven Marcus's The Other Victorians (1966), and a 1963 essay by Peter Cominos, had already begun to explore the relationship between sexual ideology and social structures and to identify prostitution as a fundamental aspect of social life in Victorian Britain.
Since that time, the study of Victorian sexuality has been refined in a number of ways. Critics have challenged the assumption of a unitary, Victorian culture and single, repressive standard of sexuality. Others have questioned how precisely sexual prescription translated into behavior. Historians of women, in particular, have taken exception to the exclusively negative image of women – as subordinated, silent victims of male sexual abuse – that emerged from the study of prescriptive and pornographic literature. Instead Mary Ryan, Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, and Linda Gordon have focused on the efforts of female moral reformers in America to dictate sexual standards and to carve out a moral territory for themselves in the public world. Although the argument for women's power and autonomy can be carried too far – female moral reformers sometimes reinforced rather than challenged modes of class and gender domination – the story of women's resistance to the dominant forces of society needs to be told.
The Contagious Diseases Acts present a particularly good opportunity to study class and gender relations in mid-Victorian Britain.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Prostitution and Victorian SocietyWomen, Class, and the State, pp. vii - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1980
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