Lotte van de Pol - The Burgher and the Whore. Prostitution in Early Modern Amsterdam [2011][A]seeders: 2
leechers: 0
Lotte van de Pol - The Burgher and the Whore. Prostitution in Early Modern Amsterdam [2011][A] (Size: 1.48 MB)
Description
Product Details
Book Title: The Burgher and the Whore: Prostitution in Early Modern Amsterdam Book Author: Lotte van de Pol (Author) Hardcover: 288 pages Publisher: Oxford University Press (May 26, 2011) Language: English ISBN-10: 019921140X ISBN-13: 978-0199211401 Book Description Publication Date: May 26, 2011 Amsterdam was, after London and Paris, the third largest city in early modern Europe, and was renowned throughout Europe for its widespread and visible prostitution. Delving deep into a wide range of sources, but making particular use of the transcripts of thousands of trials, The Burgher and the Whore reconstructs Amsterdam's whoredom in detail. The colourful and fascinating descriptions of the prostitutes, their bawds, their clients, and the police shed new light on the cultural, social, and economic conditions of the lives of poor women in a seafaring society. Lotte van de Pol explores how the vice trade was embedded in Amsterdam's society, economy, and judicial system, and how legislation and policing were shaped by misogynist attitudes towards women and fear of God's wrath and venereal diseases towards sex. The story concentrates on the people living at the margins of a rich metropolis, in which there was a large surplus of women, many of them poor immigrants with little prospect of marriage. Many changes are visible in the 150 years under scrutiny, including the view of prostitution from immorality to trade, and of prostitutes from whores and criminals to paupers. The result is a book that can be read as the history of the Dutch Golden Age from below. Reviews Excellent and detailed study...it is the perfect bedside book for the professional - and for the rest of us, too. Petra de Vries, Times Higher Education Van de Pol's is a story that deserves and will richly reward an attentive audience. Doug Catterall, Sixteenth Century Journal Even so cursory a summary of some of the riches of this work reveals its significance at a European level and one must hope one day for a similar in depth study of the London of Moll Flanders. Olwen Hufton, Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis A rich kaleidoscope of observations on the day-to-day realities of prostitution, which the author presents to the reader with analytical intelligence and without voyeurism... In spite of, or rather because of, its stern objectivity the book is fascinating. Andrew James Johnston Lotte van de Pol's fascinating description of the prostitution scene of Amsterdam at times reads like a novel. Prof Peter Schuster, Damal A (near) perfect picture of Amsterdam's prostitution... In recent years we got the picture of the The Embarrasment of Riches, but the embarrassment caused by the lack of riches had never before been mapped out in such a systematic and intelligent way. Michael Zeeman, Volkskrant About the Author Lotte van de Pol is a specialist in social, cultural, and economic history, and women's history of early modern Europe. She received her Ph.D. at the Erasmus University of Rotterdam, and held positions at the Erasmus University and the Dutch Open University. Her book with Rudolf Dekker, The Tradition of Female Transvestism in Early Modern Europe (1989), was translated into five languages. Her research into early modern prostitution resulted in two books, one of which was also translated in several languages. From 2004 to 2007 she worked at the Friedrich Meineke Institute of the Faculty of History of the Free University in Berlin as a member of the research group Egodocuments in Transcultural Perspectives. Sharing Widget |