The Underworld Sewer: A Prostitute Reflects on Life in the Trade, 1871-1909For twenty years Josie Washburn lived and worked in houses of prostitution. She spent the last twelve as the madam of a moderately fancy brothel in Lincoln, Nebraska. After retiring in 1907 and moving to Omaha, she turned to "throwing a searchlight on the underworld, " including the "cribs" of Nebraska's largest city. The Underworld Sewer, based on her own experience in the profession, blazes with a kind of honesty unavailable to more conventional moral reformers. Originally published in 1909, The Underworld Sewer asks why "the social evil" is universally considered necessary or inevitable. Washburn minces no words in exposing the conditions that perpetuate prostitution: the greed and graft of landlords, pimps, alcohol vendors, dope dealers, police officers, city administrators, and politicians; the competition for circulation by sensation-seeking newspapers; the indifference or intolerance of law-abiding, church-going citizens; the false modesty that prevents family discussion of venereal disease; the double standard that allows men to indulge their sexuality but punishes women who do so. This knowing social history and commentary on human nature is transfixing. Through her strong words, Josie Washburn, a shrewd businesswoman, was determined to end the social evil by giving a voice to its victims-mainly the women who sold their bodies and who had reason to hate the buyers. Sharon Wood is an assistant professor of history at the University of Chicago. |
What people are saying - Write a review
Reviews aren't verified, but Google checks for and removes fake content when it's identified
LibraryThing Review
User Review - setnahkt - LibraryThingFrom the women of negotiable virtue reading list. Self-published in 1909. There were plenty of “tell all” books about the lives of prostitutes written at about this time; most, however, were anonymous ... Read full review
Contents
THE EVIL | 2 |
IS IT NECESSARY | 14 |
THE HOLDUP | 22 |
THE MAN LANDLADY | 42 |
HISTORY OF THE ONEYEAR WAR | 53 |
MAN THE AGGRESSOR | 97 |
OUR SOCIETY | 105 |
A CAUSE | 115 |
ONE NIGHT | 188 |
FAIRY AND VICTIM | 204 |
THE RICH DAUGHTER | 216 |
THE UNWRITTEN LAW | 224 |
PARENTS | 235 |
REFORM SCHOOLS | 244 |
CLUB WOMEN | 247 |
PLAIN TALKS No 1 No 2 No 3 No 4 | 252 |
BETRAYAL | 128 |
ABANDONED WIFE | 136 |
THE VAMPIRE | 142 |
THE ASSIGNATION HOUSE | 151 |
THE DEPTH | 158 |
THE FIRst Drink and tHE SALOON | 165 |
MADAM | 176 |
NATURE | 268 |
THE CLERGY | 271 |
REFORM AND REFORMER | 287 |
DISEASES | 303 |
THE INSTITUTION 316 | |
Common terms and phrases
appear associate become beer believe better boys bring called cause CHAPTER chief Christian church close comes condition court cribs crowd customers daily daughters disease district door drink earn effect existence experience fact fallen friends girls give grand jury human influence keep kind known less living lovers madam means ment mind moral nature necessary never observed obtain officers owner parents past permit police political possible present profit prostitutes protection question realize reason reform regard remain respectable rich saloon SEWER sisters social evil society soul stand step stories street talk tell thing thought thousands tion true truth underworld Washburn wife woman women young
References to this book
Pistol Packin' Madams: True Stories of Notorious Women of the Old West Chris Enss Limited preview - 2006 |