I find revisionist history like this really quite irritating.
Other than the fact that it would have put them in high risk situations (and may or may not have been a motive for their murders), that these women were prostitutes has little bearing to me, and I'm sure to many others who are interested in the case. I feel like trying to suggest that they were 'middle class' is, ironically, getting close to victim blaming - like if we rewrite the narrative, they will somehow become less 'deserving' of what happened to them, which I find profoundly distasteful.
This is also extremely unfair. There has clearly been an enormous amount of research into both the canonical and non-canonical victims - I can only assume that the author has never ventured into the Mary Jane Kelly board on here, because it's quite clear that even today, there is as much interest in her story as there is in uncovering her murderer.
Other than the fact that it would have put them in high risk situations (and may or may not have been a motive for their murders), that these women were prostitutes has little bearing to me, and I'm sure to many others who are interested in the case. I feel like trying to suggest that they were 'middle class' is, ironically, getting close to victim blaming - like if we rewrite the narrative, they will somehow become less 'deserving' of what happened to them, which I find profoundly distasteful.
Rubenhold, whose book will be called The Five, said researchers had 'fixated' on the Ripper but never thought about who the women were, the Sunday Telegraph reported.
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