

Author: Bland Lucy
Publisher: Routledge Ltd
ISSN: 0961-2025
Source: Women's History Review, Vol.1, Iss.3, 1993-09, pp. : 397-412
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Abstract
In late nineteenth-century England, a number of feminists confronted prostitution through the closing of brothels and the expulsion of prostitutes from places of entertainment. Feminist historians have either understood this behaviour as reflective of feminist' powerlessness within the largely non-feminist movement for social purity, or they have neglected the behaviour and concentrated on the aspects of these women' work that appear more positive to feminists today. Neither approach attempts to understand why women took this more repressive stance and thought of it as feminist. To understand the actions of these women, it is necessary to recognise that their vision of a â–~purifiedâ–™ public and private world was often informed by religious beliefs and adherence to temperance. Concern with the morality of public space also related to women' desire for safety in public places. And their â–~repressiveâ–™ and statist actions related in part to feminist philanthropist' changing attitude toward local government.
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