Urban History April Exam Flashcards
What’s the deal with that slumming book?
Slumming: Sexual and Social Politics in Victorian London by Seth Koven 2004
describes how dirt is both political and gendered and how women and men took up tourism of the slums in great numbers, rarely defining the term but rather using it to distance themselves from the practice, though many reformers partook in formative, brief exposure to the slums early in their lifetimes. it says a lot about spectacle, reform, the role of reform societies, etc.
/Traditional histories of public health show how the medical inspection of school children, rate funded school baths, slum clearance, housing, protective labour legislation etc. resulted in the gradual but inexorable victory of the bureaucratic forces of order over the chaos produced by unregulated industrial capitalism and urbanization/
Salvation Army slum lassies - 500.000 in 1893
women who slummed were more likely to be judged for it
there was a sexual aspect depicted to it, with the slums often considered more sexual and lurid
the way some women describe the physical interaction with dirt raises further questions
what’s a casual house?
a workhouse where you only have to/can stay one night out of the month. they were established in the 1840s, and exposed in James Greenwood’s 1866 piece, “A Night in A Workhouse” for the Paul Mall Gazette detailing some of the disgusting, scary stuff he endured but also sexualizing the people there, describing at once how his keeper recommended he ‘flip [his mattress] over and [he’ll] be alright’ and the bodies of the beautiful youths in lurid detail
How did the industrial revolution affect leisure times?
There are arguments that leisure activities have, over time, become more capitalist. Time and discipline were unarguably less structured before industrial work schedules became more regulated. The post-industrial world had specific time set aside for leisure activities.
What’s types of leisure were reform societies not so into?
Animal cruelty was decreasingly part of recreation as pro-animal societies emerged. Other moral societies included temperance and teetotal societies and movements. Whereas I’m pretty sure temperance societies in the states advocated for the prohibition of all alcohol, temperance societies in Britain argued for responsible alcohol consumption and the banning of ‘Irish Spirits.’
What’s the spatial triad?
Henri Lefebrve’s Spatial tried considers the three types of space to be representational space, ideas, imagination, theory and personal meaning of space, representations of space like maps and images and practice, the way you use space and spatial realities
What’s governmentality?
intellectual machinery for rendering reality thinkable in such a way that it is amenable to political programming ~according to patrick joyce in the rule of freedom - as I understand it, government is the state, governance is the work of the state and of governing but inclusive of extragovernmental socities, community groups, religious orgs etc. and governmentally is even broader, encompassing the logic and ideology which underpins and preconditions the maintenance of the SQ
what does modernity have to do with cities?
Frisby and Featherstone call cities “one of the crucial sites of modernity - the point of its intensification.”
what is modernity?
not just a condition, but a discourse - simon gun
i understand it to be associated with faith in progress and faith in main, inextricably bound to the enlightenment
what is modernity?
not just a condition, but a discourse - simon gun
i understand it to be associated with faith in progress and faith in main, inextricably bound to the enlightenment
When did Municipal Reform occur and what was it?
1833 in Scotland, 1835 in England, Wales, 1840 in Ireland - - established London’s municipal government - meant to increase transparency and recreate burghs in a more efficient and honest way
What’s a popular criticism of governmentality discussions?
That they don’t interact well with the other historical work already done on government in cities, which is more focused on the composition of local governments, who runs them, how they are corrupt etc. Shane Ewen in ‘What is Urban History’ says that governmentality doesn’t do the work to assert its theory around the UK, but rather explains a broad structure that doesn’t interact well with the existing historiography, but in Patrick Joyce’s Rule of Freedom, Joyce uses the Municipal Reform Act as a sort of starting point and focuses on the underlying ideologies and structures that allowed the sort of power consolidation seen elsewhere before to continue, with a more professional state yet similar preponderance of power working to maintain the SQ
What year was the contagious diseases act passed?
1864 and it mandated that any woman suspected of being a ‘common prostitute’ were subject to fortnightly examination - after 5 years it was extended from ports and military towns to 18 districts in city centre.
what were some general anecdotes which show changing attitudes about sexuality?
age of consent raised in 2nd half of 19thc, some women worried about being misidentified as prostitute for being in public, see 1865 lithograph, how women are visible/clean is especially key (see slumming) and other women like nurses started to wear uniforms to quickly visually communicate why they were out in public at night, people thought the commercialisation of intimacy could disrupt family structure as everything became transactional, prostitutes were seen as a social ill and while STDs and the effects of men losing vital fluids was a concern, the wellbeing of prostitutes was not, and ulysses depicts them but none of the impoverishment
What was that place for reformed prostitutes?
The Magdalen Asylum, which increased in popularity through the first half of the 19th century and raised money partially through laundry and partially through tourism
Whats the deal with Louis Settle?
she wrote about prostitution in Edinburgh and Glasgow using modern urban history methods. She mapped arrests and found that prestigious areas like Princes Street were where many arrests were made, as prostitutes went there to seek out clientele, breaking boundaries of class and gender.