London Lock Hospital in the nineteenth century : gender, sexuality and social reform / Maria Isabel Romero Ruiz.
- Romero Ruiz, María Isabel
- Date:
- 2014
- Books
About this work
Description
Based on archival research, this volume is concerned with the treatment of "fallen women" and prostitutes at the London Lock Hospital and Asylum throughout the nineteenth century. As venereally-diseased women, they were treated in the hospital for their physical ailments; those considered ripe for reform were secluded in the asylum for a moral cure. ... The volume covers notions of purity and deviancy, issues of gender and sexual identity, the social and cultural issues connected with so-called fallen women and prostitutes, and descriptions of venereal disease and treatments for women patients at the time. The Contagious Diseases Acts and their impact are examined, as are the social and cultural implications of the creation of specialised hospitals and places of moral confinement.
Publication/Creation
Contributors
Bibliographic information
Contents
Languages
Subjects
- 19th century
- Sexually transmitted diseasesTreatmentHistory19th century
- WomenHospital careMoral and ethical aspects
- WomenSexual behaviorSocial aspectsHistory19th century
- HospitalsEnglandLondonHistory19th century
- Sex Workhistory
- Sexual Behaviorhistory
- Sexually Transmitted Diseasesrehabilitation
- Women's Health Serviceshistory
- Social Control, Formal
- Lock Hospital (London, England)
Where to find it
Location Status History of MedicineUA.RX.AA8Open shelves
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Identifiers
ISBN
- 3034317271
- 9783034317276