Description

Book Synopsis

This book makes an analysis of prostitution in Cambridge in the Victorian period based on different social and cultural discourses as well as on archival materials concerning institutions devoted to the control and regulation of promiscuity and venereal disease. Among them were the Cambridge Union Workhouse, the Cambridge Female Refuge, the Spinning House (Cambridge University Female Prison) or the town and county gaols. Also, data from the census and local and state regulations are of great relevance in the approach to the study of the «Great Social Evil» and its consequences for Victorian Cambridge. The city was divided into «town and gown» at the time, with the University having its power and regulation over all its premises through the Vice-Chancellor’s Court and its system of proctors, while the town council regulated the areas belonging to the city itself through the police. Therefore, University authorities, evangelicals and the middle-class joined their efforts to put an end to immorality, building Cambridge’s architecture of containment of sexual deviance.



Table of Contents

Contents: Suppressing Vice: Cambridge University Spinning House – ‘Fallen Women’s’ Makeshift Economy: The Cambridge Poor- Law Union Workhouse – Prostitutes’ Crimes and Petty Offences: The Cambridge Gaols – Domesticating ‘the Fallen’: The Cambridge Female Refuge.

Town and Gown Prostitution: Cambridge’s

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A Paperback / softback by Maria Isabel Romero Ruiz

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    View other formats and editions of Town and Gown Prostitution: Cambridge’s by Maria Isabel Romero Ruiz

    Publisher: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
    Publication Date: 19/10/2022
    ISBN13: 9781789977899, 978-1789977899
    ISBN10: 1789977894

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    This book makes an analysis of prostitution in Cambridge in the Victorian period based on different social and cultural discourses as well as on archival materials concerning institutions devoted to the control and regulation of promiscuity and venereal disease. Among them were the Cambridge Union Workhouse, the Cambridge Female Refuge, the Spinning House (Cambridge University Female Prison) or the town and county gaols. Also, data from the census and local and state regulations are of great relevance in the approach to the study of the «Great Social Evil» and its consequences for Victorian Cambridge. The city was divided into «town and gown» at the time, with the University having its power and regulation over all its premises through the Vice-Chancellor’s Court and its system of proctors, while the town council regulated the areas belonging to the city itself through the police. Therefore, University authorities, evangelicals and the middle-class joined their efforts to put an end to immorality, building Cambridge’s architecture of containment of sexual deviance.



    Table of Contents

    Contents: Suppressing Vice: Cambridge University Spinning House – ‘Fallen Women’s’ Makeshift Economy: The Cambridge Poor- Law Union Workhouse – Prostitutes’ Crimes and Petty Offences: The Cambridge Gaols – Domesticating ‘the Fallen’: The Cambridge Female Refuge.

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