Judith R. Walkowitz

Standard Name: Walkowitz, Judith R.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Family and Intimate relationships Olive Schreiner
OS met Karl Pearson (later a noted academic and two years younger than herself) at the Men and Women's Club , which he founded. They became very close friends, attempting to treat each other as...
Literary responses Henrietta Müller
According to the minutes of the club, the paper was immediately followed by a lacklustre and desultory discussion which historian Judith R. Walkowitz attributes to members' struggle to establish a basic vocabulary of sexual desire.
Walkowitz, Judith R. City of Dreadful Delight. University of Chicago Press, 1992.
152
politics Josephine Butler
Judith R. Walkowitz suggests that the LNA 's political following owed a great deal to the charismatic appeal of Josephine Butler , whose speeches against the instrumental rape of working women under the acts electrified...
Reception Mona Caird
The Daily Telegraph responded with an article headed Is Marriage a Failure?, which brought in about 27,000 letters in response and a parallel surge of letters in the USA in Cosmopolitan (showing, says Heilmann...
Residence Mary Catherine Hume
MCH settled with her husband and son at Cheltenham in Gloucestershire.
Judith Walkowitz writes that MCHarrived in Southampton in late August 1870; however, she is the only source to discuss MCH 's time...
Textual Production Emma Frances Brooke
Pearson had founded the club this same year for serious discussion of progressive issues.
Walkowitz, Judith R. “Science, Feminism and Romance: The Men and Women’s Club 1885-1889”. History Workshop Journal, Vol.
21
, No. 1, 1 Mar.–31 May 1986, pp. 36-59.
37
Scholar Judith R. Walkowitz writes that the method of the club was dialectical, but that the men took a dominant...

Timeline

20 April 1886: The Contagious Diseases Acts were repealed,...

National or international item

20 April 1886

The Contagious Diseases Acts were repealed, three years to the day after they had been effectively suspended.
Walkowitz, Judith R. ’We Are Not Beasts of the Field’: Prostitution and the Campaign Against the Contagious Diseases Acts, 1869-1886. University of Rochester, 1974.
132

Texts

Walkowitz, Judith R. ’We Are Not Beasts of the Field’: Prostitution and the Campaign Against the Contagious Diseases Acts, 1869-1886. University of Rochester, 1974.
Walkowitz, Judith R. City of Dreadful Delight. University of Chicago Press, 1992.
Davidoff, Leonore. “Class and Gender in Victorian England: The Diaries of Arthur J. Munby and Hannah Cullwick”. Sex and Class in Women’s History, edited by Judith L. Newton et al., Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1983, pp. 17-71.
Walkowitz, Judith R. Prostitution and Victorian Society: Women, Class, and the State. Cambridge University Press, 1980.
Walkowitz, Judith R. “Science, Feminism and Romance: The Men and Women’s Club 1885-1889”. History Workshop Journal, Vol.
21
, No. 1, pp. 36-59.
Walkowitz, Judith R. “Women Writing / Women Performing in the Imperial Metropolis”. Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers Conference, Lawrence, KS.