- Home
- Browser a Book
- Against Obscenity: Reform and the Politics of Womanhood in America, 1873--1935 (Reconfiguring American Political History)
Against Obscenity: Reform and the Politics of Womanhood in America, 1873--1935 (Reconfiguring American Political History)
Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Pre
Keywords: american, political, history, reconfiguring, america, reform, politics, womanhood, obscenity
Number of Pages: 272
Published: 2007-02-28
List price: $25.00
ISBN-10: 0801886384
ISBN-13: 9780801886386
Book Description:
Radio "shock jocks," Super Bowl entertainment, music videos, and internet spam -- all of these topics inspire passionate disagreements about whether and how to regulate sexually explicit material. But even in the midst of heated debate, most people agree that children should be shielded from exposure to pornographic images. Why are children the focal point of debates over sexually explicit material? And how did a culture rooted in Puritanism and Victorianism become saturated with sex?
In Against Obscenity, Leigh Ann Wheeler offers new answers to these questions through a study of women’s anti-obscenity activism from 1873 to 1935. This period saw the emergence of an increasingly sexualized popular culture comprised of burlesque shows, risqué vaudeville acts, and indecent motion pictures. It also witnessed the enfranchisement of women. These momentous cultural and political developments come together in a story about middle- and upper-class women who mobilized against lewd public amusements and, simultaneously, challenged the men whose work as activists, jurors, and even law enforcement officials, had defined and regulated obscenity for several decades.
By the 1920s, women who led the anti-obscenity movement enjoyed the support of millions of American women and the attention of presidents, congressmen, and Hollywood moguls. Today we live in a world profoundly shaped by their work but largely ignorant of their influence. Using primary sources as intimate as private correspondence and as formal as meeting minutes, Against Obscenity tells the story of these all but forgotten women, exploring their passionate disagreements over whether to ban a touring stage show, close a local burlesque theater, disseminate explicit sex education pamphlets, or create a federal agency to regulate Hollywood films. It shows that the rise and fall of women’s anti-obscenity leadership shaped American attitudes toward and regulation of sexually explicit material even as it charted a new era in women’s politics. In the end, the book argues that essentialist identity politics divided and ultimately disarmed women’s anti-obscenity reform, helping us understand the curiously muted impact of woman suffrage. It also cautions against framing debates over sexual material narrowly in terms of harm to children while highlighting the dangers of surrendering discourse about sexuality to the commercial realm.
Reviews:
Related Books
- Popular Culture in the Age of White Flight: Fear and Fantasy in Suburban Los Angeles (American Crossroads)
- Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940
- An Army of Women: Gender and Politics in Gilded Age Kansas (Reconfiguring American Political History)
- Carnal Knowledge and Imperial Power: Race and the Intimate in Colonial Rule
- Sex and Citizenship in Antebellum America (Gender and American Culture)