Simon Stern of the University of Toronto notes that Elizabeth Parish Smith has published "In a Bar Room Called the 'Fifteen Amendment'": Reconstruction and the Women of New Orleans's Demimonde," 112 South Atlantic Quarterly 473 (2013).
Here is the abstract.
Here is the abstract.
This essay examines the experiences
of three women—one Creole, one black, one white—in New Orleans’s
Reconstruction-era demimonde. Enacted just months after the end of the Civil
War and surviving in various forms for fifty-two years, a regulatory system
governed the sex trade in this, the largest and most cosmopolitan city of the
former Confederacy. Postwar regulation made no racial distinctions among women
in the trade, and prostitutes’ lives were thus often remarkably similar. Women
worked and resided in the same parts of town, even on the same notorious block;
faced similarly explosive, dangerous bursts of violence; and exploited the
physical intimacy of their work to steal from clients.
In large measure due to their
similar legal treatment under regulation, many prostitutes shared W. E. B. Du
Bois’s common “economic condition and destiny” across racial lines.
Nevertheless, Du Bois uses prostitution in Black Reconstruction as a rhetorical
device representing capitalism’s moral corruption, not as a practice affecting
real women’s lives. Reading the experiences of three New Orleans prostitutes
against the larger racial and economic politics of the period allows us to see
how some of the most radical and far-reaching changes of Reconstruction
occurred among women living at the law’s edges.
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