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The Polish Studies Transdisciplinary Perspectives series aims at providing a forum for studies on Slavonic Languages and Literatures as well as Ethnology and Cultural Studies. Editors seek the submission of monographs on modern Polish authors seen in a broader context of cultural and literary criticism.
In the nineteenth century, state policy towards prostitution was primarily shaped by an assessment of its role in spreading venereal diseases. In this book, the author traces normative and organisational efforts of the authorities of the Kingdom of Poland, which sought to maintain control over prostitution and the health of women who offered paid sexual services. The author uses data collected by the police and medical authorities supervising legal and illegal prostitution to provide a demographic and sociological picture of the big-city and small-town market of sexual commerce. It was only in the early twentieth century when prostitution became an important subject of the Polish public debate, a process which is described in the book against the backdrop of the major issues and fears of the epoch.
Auteur
Jolanta Sikorska-Kulesza is a professor at the Institute of History of the University of Warsaw. She specialises in research on the social history of the Kingdom of Poland and the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the nineteenth century (the history and transformations of the nobility, memory of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the social role of photography) and critical editing of sources.
Contenu
The state versus prostitution police and medical supervision over prostitution legal prostitution prostitution in the eyes of the society abolitionism vs. regimentationism the perceived origins of prostitution aid for prostitutes and the struggle for a new morality.
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