The bawdy politic in Stuart England, 1660-1714 : political pornography and prostitution

Author(s)

    • Mowry, Melissa M.

Bibliographic Information

The bawdy politic in Stuart England, 1660-1714 : political pornography and prostitution

Melissa M. Mowry

(Women and gender in the early modern world)

Ashgate, c2004

Available at  / 10 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [153]-165

Includes index

Contents of Works

  • The bawdy politic and English common law
  • The specter of corporate identity and 1668
  • Monstrous mothers : property and the common law
  • Jades at livery and other prostitutes
  • A citizen's duty and "common justice"

Description and Table of Contents

Description

With this original study, Melissa Mowry makes a strong contribution to a provocative interdisciplinary conversation about an important and influential sub genre: seventeenth-century political pornography. This book further advances our understanding of pornography's importance in seventeenth-century England by extending its investigation beyond the realm of cultural rhetoric into the realm of cultural practice. In addition to the satires which previous scholars have discussed in this context, Mowry brings to light hitherto unexamined pornographies as well as archival texts that reveal the ways in which the satires helped shape the social policies endured by prostitutes and bawds. Her study includes substantial archival evidence of prostitution from the Middlesex Sessions and the Bridewell Courtbooks. Mowry argues that Stuart partisans cultivated representations of bawds and prostitutes because polemicists saw the public sale of sex as republicanism's ideological apotheosis. Sex work, partisans repeatedly asserted, inherently disrupted ancestral systems of property transfer and distribution in favour of personal ownership, while the republican belief that all men owned the labour of their body achieved a nightmarish incarnation in the prostitute's understanding that the sexual favours she performed were labour. The prostitute's body thus emerged in the loyalist imagination as the epitome of the democratic body politic. Carefully grounded in original research, The Bawdy Politic in Stuart England, 1660-1714 is a cultural study with broad implications for the way we understand the historical constructions and legal deployments of women's sexuality.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Preface
  • The Bawdy politic: Restoration political pornography and the common law
  • The specter of corporate identity and 1668
  • Monstrous mothers: property and the common law
  • Jades at Livery and other prostitutes
  • A citizen's duty and 'common justice'
  • Coda
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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