It strikes me often that we tend to look at the crimes of the Whitechapel Murderer from the lofty and splendid isolation of the age we now live in, rather than immersing ourselves fully into the murky waters of the Late Victorian Period, where, after all, the answer to these crimes most likely is buried, along with our knowledge of that peculiar and particular age.
We tend to gloss over, or even forget, the incredible social stigma that could be attached to personal events or circumstances in the LVP, which we now today accept as quite normal and beyond social reproach.
I have highlighted one of those social stigmas - giving birth to a child when unmarried - on another thread, but here I would like to discuss the social stigma of syphilis, and how society's attitude towards this disease in the LVP could have influenced and effected the behaviour of individuals within that society with the disease.
In this direct regard I was enormously pleased to find a paper by a Dr Gerard Tilles entitled 'Stigma of syphilis in 19th Century France' where he makes some very interesting statements and breaches what I think are very far reaching conclusions. For instance that in 1888 syphilis was still considered by many in the medical profession to be a 'heredity' disease, and that the only course left to society in the 1880's was to clear the prostitutes off the streets and imprison them. To this end, from 1871 to 1903, 725,000 prostitutes were arrested by the Paris police and imprisoned for being syphilitic.
He writes this concerning the influence of the 'Societe francaise de prophylaxie sanitaire et morale' in those years:
'In summary, the members of the SFPSM extended their influence beyond the individual life of men and women, and finally developed a message of collective fear:
fear of prostitutes, a marginal social category and in a general manner of the working classes considered as aggressors of the aristocratic society and bourgeoisie
fear of sexuality regarded as an element of degeneration followed by diseappearance of the race by reason of deleterious consequences of syphilis on birth rate,
and finally fear of the decay of the social order.'
We tend to gloss over, or even forget, the incredible social stigma that could be attached to personal events or circumstances in the LVP, which we now today accept as quite normal and beyond social reproach.
I have highlighted one of those social stigmas - giving birth to a child when unmarried - on another thread, but here I would like to discuss the social stigma of syphilis, and how society's attitude towards this disease in the LVP could have influenced and effected the behaviour of individuals within that society with the disease.
In this direct regard I was enormously pleased to find a paper by a Dr Gerard Tilles entitled 'Stigma of syphilis in 19th Century France' where he makes some very interesting statements and breaches what I think are very far reaching conclusions. For instance that in 1888 syphilis was still considered by many in the medical profession to be a 'heredity' disease, and that the only course left to society in the 1880's was to clear the prostitutes off the streets and imprison them. To this end, from 1871 to 1903, 725,000 prostitutes were arrested by the Paris police and imprisoned for being syphilitic.
He writes this concerning the influence of the 'Societe francaise de prophylaxie sanitaire et morale' in those years:
'In summary, the members of the SFPSM extended their influence beyond the individual life of men and women, and finally developed a message of collective fear:
fear of prostitutes, a marginal social category and in a general manner of the working classes considered as aggressors of the aristocratic society and bourgeoisie
fear of sexuality regarded as an element of degeneration followed by diseappearance of the race by reason of deleterious consequences of syphilis on birth rate,
and finally fear of the decay of the social order.'
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