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Abstract

Findlay, Ohio's nineteenth-century newspapers published crime reports, legislative actions, and opinion pieces about prostitution within the city. Victorian ideology was inherently rigid and imbalanced between men and women, which is why nonconforming sexual activity, specifically sex for sale, represents a rhetorically significant phenomenon. When considering Findlay’s historical and contemporary reputation as a politically conservative and traditional family-focused municipality, the newspaper articles show that some residents resisted gendered behavioral standards that city leaders sought to uphold during its most socioeconomically formative years. This thesis critically looks at previously unstudied, male-authored Victorian prostitution articles to determine how journalists ideologically situated and represented the female-centric trade within the community. The project also identifies new information that reflects the women’s rhetorical presence. This paper argues that, despite the phallocentric nature of the newspaper articles, prostitutes’ voices can still be “heard” and recognized for their rhetorical contributions, thereby encouraging historical revisioning.

Details

Title
Unvirtuous Findlay: Recovering Voices and Reinterpreting Prostitution Rhetoric from Findlay, Ohio's Victorian Newspapers
Author
Brown, Joy
Year
2019
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
ISBN
978-1-392-29485-7
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2243135563
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.