VTechWorks staff will be away for the Thanksgiving holiday beginning at noon on Wednesday, November 27, through Friday, November 29. We will resume normal operations on Monday, December 2. Thank you for your patience.
 

Antebellum Fantasies and Southern Legacies: Memory and Sex in Turn of the Century New Orleans

dc.contributor.authorEdmondson, Taulbyen
dc.contributor.editorJordan, Hollyen
dc.contributor.editorMatheis, Christianen
dc.contributor.editorEngel, Saschaen
dc.date.accessioned2021-08-27T23:54:39Zen
dc.date.available2021-08-27T23:54:39Zen
dc.date.issued2013-09-01en
dc.description.abstractAt the turn of the twentieth century, “there was at least one red-light district in virtually every American city with a population over 100,000”—and New Orleans was no different. However, neither New Orleans, nor its vice, was a typical American establishment, as Emily Landau’s study on New Orleans’ mixed-race prostitution in Storyville, the emergent red-light district that encompassed it, argues. Like the city itself—with a long history of colonialism and racial intermixing that “made New Orleans resemble a Caribbean enclave more than a Deep South city”—Storyville was a melting pot. The district was an interracial sexual laboratory that bred whiteness as Southern white men satisfied sexual fantasies of racial domination and exoticism, while Jim Crow segregationists and Progressive moral reformers fought to restrict the “racially inferior” and rid the United States of moral depravity outside of its confines. But Storyville was not an exception from larger social processes, and it was certainly not a throwback to an era of ethical laxity in New Orleans. Instead, the district was representative of the historical processes that constituted, and altered, American racial, gendered, and sexual identities at the cusp of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries...en
dc.description.versionPublished versionen
dc.format.extent5 pagesen
dc.format.extent816.89 KBen
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfen
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/htmen
dc.identifier.citationEdmondson, T., 2013. Antebellum Fantasies and Southern Legacies: Memory and Sex in Turn of the Century New Orleans. Spectra, 2(2). DOI: http://doi.org/10.21061/spectra.v2i2.271en
dc.identifier.doihttp://doi.org/10.21061/spectra.v2i2.271en
dc.identifier.eissn2162-8793en
dc.identifier.issue2en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/104785en
dc.identifier.volume2en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherVirginia Tech Publishingen
dc.relation.ispartofseriesStudent Publications Seriesen
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 Internationalen
dc.rights.holderEdmondson, Taulbyen
dc.rights.holderVirginia Techen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/en
dc.titleAntebellum Fantasies and Southern Legacies: Memory and Sex in Turn of the Century New Orleansen
dc.title.serialSpectraen
dc.typeArticle - Refereeden
dc.type.dcmitypeTexten

Files

Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
spectra-v2.2-edmondson.pdf
Size:
816.89 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Name:
spectra-v2.2-edmondson.htm
Size:
11.87 KB
Format:
Hypertext Markup Language

Collections