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Sodom on the Thames: Sex, Love, And Scandal in Wilde Times
 
 
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Sodom on the Thames: Sex, Love, And Scandal in Wilde Times [Hardcover]

Morris B. Kaplan (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

September 8, 2005
Sodom on the Thames looks closely at three episodes involving sex between men in late-nineteenth-century England. Morris Kaplan draws on extensive research into court records, contemporary newspaper accounts, personal correspondence and diaries, even a pornographic novel. He focuses on two notorious scandals and one quieter incident. In 1871, transvestites "Stella" (Ernest Boulton) and "Fanny" (Frederick Park), who had paraded around London’s West End followed by enthusiastic admirers, were tried for conspiracy to commit sodomy. In 1889–1890, the "Cleveland Street affair" revealed that telegraph delivery boys had been moonlighting as prostitutes for prominent gentlemen, one of whom fled abroad. In 1871, Eton schoolmaster William Johnson resigned in disgrace, generating shockwaves among the young men in his circle whose romantic attachments lasted throughout their lives. Kaplan shows how profoundly these scandals influenced the trials of Oscar Wilde in 1895 and contributed to growing anxiety about male friendships.

Sodom on the Thames reconstructs these incidents in rich detail and gives a voice to the diverse people involved. It deepens our understanding of late Victorian attitudes toward urban culture, masculinity, and male homoeroticism. Kaplan also explores the implications of such historical narratives for the contemporary politics of sexuality.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Though it has the trappings of a scholarly cult classic, Kaplan's look at the budding world of cross-dressing, transgenderism and male homosexuality that crossed the strict class lines of Victorian London can hook even the most unaware reader. Kaplan, a philosophy professor and the author of Sexual Justice: Democratic Citizenship and the Politics of Desire, draws on three major episodes involving sex between men (or the strong suspicion of it) to weave an intriguing, amusing and occasionally disturbing narrative of sexual controversy in staunchly conservative times. Kaplan painstakingly reconstructs Eton headmaster William Johnson Cory's shameful resignation after accusations of homosexual behavior surfaced in 1871; Kaplan even includes letters Cory wrote to a student that contain a clear "plaint of the disappointed lover." The cases can also be subversively funny, especially that of Frederick Park and Ernest Boulton, cross-dressers known as "Fanny" and "Stella," who were brought up on sodomy conspiracy charges in 1871. Famous for their female portrayals and infamous for frequenting clubs in feminine garb to solicit unknowing men, the term "drag" was first used to refer to the pair and their contemporaries. Kaplan's most impressive achievement is his ability to tell the story without judging; indeed, he shows a great deal of compassion for his real-life characters. This readable, eye-opening book will surely appeal to history buffs looking to learn something a little queer about the Victorian age.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"Though it has the trappings of a scholarly cult classic, Kaplan's look at the budding world of cross-dressing, transgenderism and male homosexuality that crossed the strict class lines of Victorian London can hook even the most unaware reader. Kaplan . . . draws on three major episodes involving sex between men (or the strong suspicion of it) to weave an intriguing, amusing, and occasionally disturbing narrative of sexual controversy in staunchly conservative times. . . . The cases can be subversively funny, especially that of Frederick Park and Ernest Boulton, cross-dressers known as 'Fanny' and 'Stella,' who were brought up on sodomy conspiracy charges in 1871. Famous for their female portrayals and infamous for frequenting clubs in feminine garb to solicit unknowing men, the term 'drag' was first used to refer to the pair and their contemporaries. Kaplan's most impressive achievement is his ability to tell the story without judging; indeed, he shows a great deal of compassion for his real-life characters. This readable, eye-opening book will surely appeal to history buffs looking to learn something a little queer about the Victorian age." --Publishers Weekly

"In four detailed case studies, all based on archival work, Morris B. Kaplan explores a complex network of loyal romantic friends, brazen cross-dressers, upper-class male brothels-and astonishing legal decisions. His analysis of Eton College friendships uncovers a potent mixture of politics and sex among the most powerful men of the late nineteenth century. Kaplan is always sensitive to the ways in which the past is a different country, but also strangely familiar to us. In this very readable book, fresh, unexpected connections reveal the pervasive importance of male erotic friendship in the Victorian period." --Martha Vicinus, Eliza M. Mosher Distinguished University Professor, University of Michigan

"This is a book of stories. One after the other they are presented to the reader: the memoirs of Symonds, the spectacular career of Boulton and Park, the Cleveland Street scandals, the lives and times of William Johnson Cory and Reginald Brett. Morris B. Kaplan has gathered new material from the archives and has consolidated the work of biographers and historians: the result is a compelling, original, and often exhilarating work of historical recovery. Sodom on the Thames is a consistently interesting, often spellbinding, portrait of late-Victorian life." --Michael Levenson, William B. Christian Professor of Modern Literature and Critical Theory, University of Virginia --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 328 pages
  • Publisher: Cornell Univ Pr (September 8, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0801436788
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801436789
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #806,988 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Arguments for the Senses, September 3, 2006
By 
Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Sodom on the Thames: Sex, Love, And Scandal in Wilde Times (Hardcover)
I enjoyed Kaplan's book and felt a tinge of sympathy for him, once I dove into it and realized that a bit of his thunder had been stolen from him by the publication of Neil McKenna's biography of Oscar Wilde, the SECRET LIFE, which uses much of the same scholarly material in a specious, and yet ultimately thrilling and rewarding way far removed from Kaplan's more leisurely humdrumism. Kaplan wants to be scintillating, and he took ten years or more to perfect every sentence in SODOM ON THE THAMES, and yet when push comes to shove we've read most of it in McKenna's quickly researched and rushed through the presses biography.

So what was shocking in May becomes yawnmaking in November; oh, twere ever thus. Perhaps anticipating this, Kaplan quotes freely from the Victorian gay porn classic SINS OF THE CITIES ON THE PLAIN, which mirrors, in his opinion, all three of the sex scandals he relates in his book. I believe him! I was totally convinced by his argument. First there was the Boulton and Park cross-dressing affair, in which two middle-class men were accused of dressing as women and masquerading as women to have sex with men. Talk about rude, the court had a doctor bend them over footstools, shine a flashlight up them, to see if they had ever been penetrated. Can you really tell? Opinions differ and the defense made the most of it.

Then there was the schoolboy scandal in which a respected master was forced to resign from Eton after some of his compromising letters came to light. The powers that be kept this one on the hush hush, so it didn't have the tabloid headlines of the Boulton and Park arrests.

Fiinally, the Cleveland Street investigation, in which noblemen were caught with their pants down having it off with telegraph boys. Well, the main ones escaped to Europe but it left a bad taste in people's mouths about sodomy.

Finally, Kaplan argues, Wilde's "sins" wouldn't have attracted as much attention had not these three scandals bubbled up previously to focus people's attention on what they had not previously been totally able to comprehend. They were like, "sodomy? On the Thames? What's that?" But once the buzz started, you couldn't stuff the lightning back into the bottle and Wilde was literally screwed.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The presence in London of sites where men looking for sex with other men might congregate was not new in the 1860s. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
professional sodomite, telegraph delivery boys, young grenadier, first criminal trial, attempted sodomy, male brothel, gross indecency, telegraph boys, libel trial
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Lord Arthur, West End, Lord Euston, John Saul, Oscar Wilde, Ernest Boulton, Prince of Wales, Bow Street, Regy Brett, Dublin Castle, Lord Gomorrah, The Maiden Tribute, Criminal Law Amendment Act, Burlington Arcade, Ernest Parke, Liberal Party, Lord Alfred Douglas, Dorian Gray, Leicester Square, Louis Hurt, North London Press, Pall Mall Gazette, Duke of Beaufort, Reynolds's Newspaper, Simeon Solomon
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