Hello all,
It seems to me that at some point in time many began to feel that the the term "Unfortunate" is synonymous with "Prostitute", or "Street Whore".That thinking then taints how the person in question views circumstances where the activities of the "Unfortunate" cannot be determined.
For example.....when assessing what the Unfortunate known as Liz Stride is doing near the mens club, or why Kate Eddowes, another unfortunate, heads to Mitre Square that fateful night...or in another example, what a woman... who is not an Unfortunate by definition.... might do at 2am when its raining and she is at home fed and drunk.....assuming their main role is actually that of a prostitute and so their behavior would likely be the same, is not always prudent or warranted.
An Unfortunate to my understanding is a woman who is homeless, or without a permanent address, without work or means to support herself, and has no family, husband or friends caring for her financially.
In order to survive many Unfortunates turned to Prostitution as a sole means of acquiring food, drink and shelter,...but as we can see some Unfortunates made money in ways that are considered legitimate and acceptable even in Victorian times...Liz cleaned rooms, Kate could knit and sew, Maria Harvey takes in laundry. Kate pawned clothing...ok, not hers, but the point is made.
When considering why certain events transpired in the lives of these women, and what may have transpired when we cannot know for sure, I believe its in everyones best interest....including the deceased women, to remember that the life that included prostitution was not necessarily devoid of other ways to earn, nor is it something that they would have automatically embraced willingly, and that when we dont know why they were at certain locations or what they were doing, the suggestion that they were then selling themselves might be dependent on whether they had a bed paid for that night already, whether they had eaten that day or for some days in a row, and in many cases whether their taste for drink was sated. Or even how they felt about doing it on that night....let alone as a forced means of survival.
We can not assume that in periods when activities by the victims are unclear, that they were prostituting themselves. These were after all multi-dimensional people, not characters in a tall tale, and their lives and emotions could be as complex as we could imagine.
All the best folks.
It seems to me that at some point in time many began to feel that the the term "Unfortunate" is synonymous with "Prostitute", or "Street Whore".That thinking then taints how the person in question views circumstances where the activities of the "Unfortunate" cannot be determined.
For example.....when assessing what the Unfortunate known as Liz Stride is doing near the mens club, or why Kate Eddowes, another unfortunate, heads to Mitre Square that fateful night...or in another example, what a woman... who is not an Unfortunate by definition.... might do at 2am when its raining and she is at home fed and drunk.....assuming their main role is actually that of a prostitute and so their behavior would likely be the same, is not always prudent or warranted.
An Unfortunate to my understanding is a woman who is homeless, or without a permanent address, without work or means to support herself, and has no family, husband or friends caring for her financially.
In order to survive many Unfortunates turned to Prostitution as a sole means of acquiring food, drink and shelter,...but as we can see some Unfortunates made money in ways that are considered legitimate and acceptable even in Victorian times...Liz cleaned rooms, Kate could knit and sew, Maria Harvey takes in laundry. Kate pawned clothing...ok, not hers, but the point is made.
When considering why certain events transpired in the lives of these women, and what may have transpired when we cannot know for sure, I believe its in everyones best interest....including the deceased women, to remember that the life that included prostitution was not necessarily devoid of other ways to earn, nor is it something that they would have automatically embraced willingly, and that when we dont know why they were at certain locations or what they were doing, the suggestion that they were then selling themselves might be dependent on whether they had a bed paid for that night already, whether they had eaten that day or for some days in a row, and in many cases whether their taste for drink was sated. Or even how they felt about doing it on that night....let alone as a forced means of survival.
We can not assume that in periods when activities by the victims are unclear, that they were prostituting themselves. These were after all multi-dimensional people, not characters in a tall tale, and their lives and emotions could be as complex as we could imagine.
All the best folks.
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