by Laura Hapke
University of Wisconsin Press, 1989
Paper: 978-0-87972-474-0 | Cloth: 978-0-87972-473-3
Library of Congress Classification PS374.P67H37 1989
Dewey Decimal Classification 813.0093520692

ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

The period 1885 to 1917 saw thousands of American crusaders working hard to “save the fallen women,” but little on the part of American social protest writers. In this first work on the subject, Laura Hapke examines how writers attempted to turn an outcast into a heroine in a literature otherwise known for its puritanical attitude toward the fallen woman. She focuses on how these authors (all male) expressed late-Victorian conflicts about female sexuality. If, as they all maintained, women have an innate preference for chastity, how could they account for the prostitute? Was she a sinner, suggesting the potential waywardness of all women? Or, if she was a victim, what of her “depravity”?