Cover image for Slumming : Sexual and Social Politics in Victorian London.
Slumming : Sexual and Social Politics in Victorian London.
Title:
Slumming : Sexual and Social Politics in Victorian London.
Author:
Koven, Seth.
ISBN:
9781400843589
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (371 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- CONTENTS -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- INTRODUCTION Slumming: Eros and Altruism in Victorian London -- Slumming Defined -- Who Went Slumming? Sources and Social Categories -- Eros and Altruism: James Hinton and the Hintonians -- PART ONE: INCOGNITOS, FICTIONS, AND CROSS-CLASS MASQUERADES -- CHAPTER ONE: Workhouse Nights: Homelessness, Homosexuality, and Cross-Class Masquerades -- James Greenwood and London in 1866 -- Reading "A Night in a Workhouse" -- Responses to "A Night in a Workhouse" -- Homelessness as Homosexuality: Sexology, Social Policy, and the 1898 Vagrancy Act -- Postscript: Legacies of "A Night" on Representations of the Homeless Poor -- CHAPTER TWO: Dr. Barnardo's Artistic Fictions: Photography, Sexuality, and the Ragged Child -- Facts, Fictions, and Epistemologies of Welfare -- "The Very Wicked Woman" and "Sodomany" in Dr. Barnardo's Boys' Home -- Representing the Ragged Child -- Joseph Merrick and the Monstrosity of Poverty -- Conclusion -- CHAPTER THREE: The American Girl in London: Gender, Journalism, and Social Investigation in the Late Victorian Metropolis -- Journalism as Autobiography, Autobiography as Fiction -- Gender and Journalism -- An "American Girl" Impersonating London's Laboring Women -- Conclusion -- PART TWO: CROSS-CLASS SISTERHOOD AND BROTHERHOOD IN THE SLUMS -- CHAPTER FOUR: The Politics and Erotics of Dirt: Cross-Class Sisterhood in the Slums -- Cross-Class Sisterhood and the Politics of Dirt -- "There will be something the matter with the ladies" -- "Nasty Books": Dirty Bodies, Dirty Desires in Women's Slum Novels -- Conclusion: "White Gloves" and "Dirty Hoxton Pennies" -- CHAPTER FIVE: The "New Man" in the Slums: Religion, Masculinity, and the Men's Settlement House Movement -- The Sources of "Brotherhood" in Late Victorian England.

"Modern Monasteries," "Philanthropic Brotherhoods," and the Origins of the Settlement House Movement -- Religion and Codes of Masculinity -- "True hermaphrodites realised at last": Sexing the Male Settlement Movement -- A Door Unlocked: The Politics of Brotherly Love in the Slums -- CONCLUSION -- MANUSCRIPT SOURCES -- NOTES -- INDEX.
Abstract:
In the 1880s, fashionable Londoners left their elegant homes and clubs in Mayfair and Belgravia and crowded into omnibuses bound for midnight tours of the slums of East London. A new word burst into popular usage to describe these descents into the precincts of poverty to see how the poor lived: slumming. In this captivating book, Seth Koven paints a vivid portrait of the practitioners of slumming and their world: who they were, why they went, what they claimed to have found, how it changed them, and how slumming, in turn, powerfully shaped both Victorian and twentieth-century understandings of poverty and social welfare, gender relations, and sexuality. The slums of late-Victorian London became synonymous with all that was wrong with industrial capitalist society. But for philanthropic men and women eager to free themselves from the starched conventions of bourgeois respectability and domesticity, slums were also places of personal liberation and experimentation. Slumming allowed them to act on their irresistible "attraction of repulsion" for the poor and permitted them, with society's approval, to get dirty and express their own "dirty" desires for intimacy with slum dwellers and, sometimes, with one another. Slumming elucidates the histories of a wide range of preoccupations about poverty and urban life, altruism and sexuality that remain central in Anglo-American culture, including the ethics of undercover investigative reporting, the connections between cross-class sympathy and same-sex desire, and the intermingling of the wish to rescue the poor with the impulse to eroticize and sexually exploit them. By revealing the extent to which politics and erotics, social and sexual categories overflowed their boundaries and transformed one another, Koven recaptures the ethical dilemmas that men and women confronted--and continue to confront--in

trying to "love thy neighbor as thyself.".
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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