Magdalenes

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A01=Linda Mahood
Asylums
Author_Linda Mahood
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Charity
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Exhibitions
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Female Penitentiaries
female sexuality discourse
foucault
Foucault social theory
Friendship
gender regulation
Glasgow Police
Glasgow Police Act
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Government
Harlots
history of medicine
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Magdalene Asylums
magdalene homes
Magdalene Institution
Medicine And The State
moral education
moral reform
moral reform movements
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Nineteenth Century Prostitution
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Pornography
Poverty
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Prostitution
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regulated prostitution
regulation of working class women
Relationships
religious training
Schools
Scottish penal institutions
sexual behaviour
social history
social medicine
Social reform
Urban Working Class Culture
Veiled Regulation
Venereal disease
Venereal Patients
Victorian social history
Violate
walkowitz
women history
Workhouse
working class women
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415623537
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Oct 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The nineteenth century witnessed a discursive explosion around the subject of sex. Historical evidence indicates that the sexual behaviour which had always been punishable began to be spoken of, regulated, and policed in new ways. Prostitutes were no longer dragged through the town, dunked in lakes, whipped and branded. Medieval forms of punishment shifted from the emphasis on punishing the body to punishing the mind.

Building on the work of Foucault, Walkowitz, and Mort, Linda Mahood traces and examines new approached emerging throughout the nineteenth century towards prostitution and looks at the apparatus and institutions created for its regulation and control. In particular, throughout the century, the bourgeoisie contributed regularly to the discourse on the prostitution problem, the debate focusing on the sexual and vocational behaviour of working class women. The thrust of the discourse, however, was not just repression or control but the moral reform – through religious training, moral education, and training in domestic service – of working class women.

With her emphasis on Scottish 'magdalene' homes and a case study of the system of police repression used in Glasgow, Linda Mahood has written the first book of its kind dealing with these issues in Scotland. At the same time the book sets nineteenth-century treatment of prostitutes in Scotland into the longer run of British attempts to control 'drabs and harlots', and contributes to the wider discussion of 'dangerous female sexuality' in a male-dominated society.

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