London Lock Hospital in the nineteenth century : gender, sexuality and social reform / Maria Isabel Romero Ruiz.

  • Romero Ruiz, María Isabel
Date:
2014
  • Books

About this work

Description

Based on archival research, this volume is concerned with the treatment of "fallen women" and prostitutes at the London Lock Hospital and Asylum throughout the nineteenth century. As venereally-diseased women, they were treated in the hospital for their physical ailments; those considered ripe for reform were secluded in the asylum for a moral cure. ... The volume covers notions of purity and deviancy, issues of gender and sexual identity, the social and cultural issues connected with so-called fallen women and prostitutes, and descriptions of venereal disease and treatments for women patients at the time. The Contagious Diseases Acts and their impact are examined, as are the social and cultural implications of the creation of specialised hospitals and places of moral confinement.

Publication/Creation

Bern, Switzerland : Peter Lang AG, 2014.

Bibliographic information

Includes bibliographical references (pages [201]-209) and index.

Contents

Introduction: the London Lock Hospital and Asylum and specialist hospitals in the nineteenth century -- Fallen women, prostitutes and the treatment of venereal disease in the nineteenth century -- Female patients and the Lock Hospital regulations throughout the nineteenth century -- The London Lock Hospital and the Contagious Diseases Acts: reports and accounts -- From deviancy to purity: the London Lock Asylum and moral reform -- The London Lock at the turn of the century: new perspectives on the physical and moral cure of deviant women.

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatus
    History of Medicine
    UA.RX.AA8
    Open shelves

Permanent link

Identifiers

ISBN

  • 3034317271
  • 9783034317276