During the opening decades of the twentieth century, highly visible
red-light districts occupied entire sections of many American
cities. Prostitution, still euphemistically referred to as the
"social evil," became one of the dominant social issues of the
progressive era.
Mark Thomas Connelly places the response to prostitution during
those years within its complete social and cultural context. He
shows how the antiprostitution movement became a focus for many of
the anxieties and social tensions of the period. For many,
prostitution seemed ominously linked to the changing status of
women, the emergence of permissive sexual morals, uncontrolled
immigration, the rampant spread of venereal disease, the decline of
rural and small-town values, and urban political and moral
corruption. Indeed prostitution became a symbol and code word for a
host of unsettling issues and social changes.
Connelly probes the complex relationship between prostitution and
the other major social issues of the time. He shows that the
response to prostitution was ambiguous. It was forward-looking in
that it violated a traditional taboo by openly discussing an
important aspect of sexual behavior, but it was also one of the
last efforts to rebuttress traditional Victorian beliefs about the
proper role and position of women in American society.
Combining the techniques of social, cultural, and intellectual
history, Connelly interprets every major aspect of his subject: the
relationship between prostitution and the issue of independent,
mobile women in the cities; the obsession with "clandestine"
prostitution; the belief in a direct relationship between
prostitution and immigration; the problem of venereal disease; the
urban Vice Commission reports on the extent of commercialized sex
in the cities; the "white slavery" issue and the belief that a
conspiracy was afoot to debauch native American womanhood; and the
concern about prostitution in connection with the last great issue
of the progressive years, the mobilization for World War I.
The Response ot Prostitution in the Progressive Era shows
that great tension, anxiety, and doubt were important aspects of
the profound reorientation in American society that gives the
progressive era its distinctiveness as a historical period.
Connelly reasserts their historical importance in this study of a
major social and cutural episode in American history.
Originally published in 1980.
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