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1.
Salud Colect ; 16: e2446, 2020 May 04.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32574457

ABSTRACT

This article describes cases presented by experts from the legislative and medical-legal fields regarding the use of psychoactive substances among Argentinian women from 1878 to 1930. Background information is presented regarding the relationship between women and the use different drugs, medical interventions on the female body where psychoactive substances were used are analyzed, and experts' descriptions of cases of female drug users are detailed. Experts' discourses during this period did not attempt to comprehend the specificities of female consumption, but were rather used to position the issue of drug use as a social problem. This was done using three prototypes: the victim of a sick husband; the prostitute who encourages drug use among the weak in spirit (natural-born criminals); and the virtuous young woman who succumbs to drug addiction in spite of her father's rule. Each figure reinforces the need for state intervention and increased social control.


Este trabajo describe casos expuestos por expertos de los ámbitos legislativo y médico-legal periodístico, en los que se reporta el consumo de sustancias psicoactivas por parte de mujeres de Argentina, entre 1878 y 1930. Se presentan antecedentes sobre mujeres y usos de distintos fármacos, se analizan las intervenciones médicas que utilizan sustancias psicoactivas sobre el cuerpo femenino, y se detallan los casos de mujeres consumidoras desde las miradas expertas. En este periodo, los discursos expertos no buscaron comprender la especificidad femenina del consumo, sino promover el tema drogas como un problema. Esto se produce utilizando tres prototipos: la víctima de un marido enfermo, la prostituta que envicia a los débiles de espíritu (criminal nata), y la joven virtuosa que contraviene la ley del padre y sucumbe en la toxicomanía. Cada figura refuerza la necesidad de intervención estatal y control social.


Subject(s)
Psychotropic Drugs/history , Social Problems/history , Substance-Related Disorders/history , Women/history , Argentina , Caregiver Burden/history , Crime Victims/history , Drug Users/history , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Human Body , Humans , Hysteria/history , Morphine Dependence/history , Paternalism , Phytotherapy/history , Psychotropic Drugs/administration & dosage , Sex Work/history , Social Problems/classification , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Substance-Related Disorders/classification
2.
Salud colect ; 16: e2446, 2020.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-1139503

ABSTRACT

RESUMEN Este trabajo describe casos expuestos por expertos de los ámbitos legislativo y médico-legal periodístico, en los que se reporta el consumo de sustancias psicoactivas por parte de mujeres de Argentina, entre 1878 y 1930. Se presentan antecedentes sobre mujeres y usos de distintos fármacos, se analizan las intervenciones médicas que utilizan sustancias psicoactivas sobre el cuerpo femenino, y se detallan los casos de mujeres consumidoras desde las miradas expertas. En este periodo, los discursos expertos no buscaron comprender la especificidad femenina del consumo, sino promover el tema drogas como un problema. Esto se produce utilizando tres prototipos: la víctima de un marido enfermo, la prostituta que envicia a los débiles de espíritu (criminal nata), y la joven virtuosa que contraviene la ley del padre y sucumbe en la toxicomanía. Cada figura refuerza la necesidad de intervención estatal y control social.


ABSTRACT This article describes cases presented by experts from the legislative and medical-legal fields regarding the use of psychoactive substances among Argentinian women from 1878 to 1930. Background information is presented regarding the relationship between women and the use of different drugs, medical interventions on the female body where psychoactive substances were used are analyzed, and experts' descriptions of cases of female drug users are detailed. Experts' discourses during this period did not attempt to comprehend the specificities of female consumption but were rather used to position the issue of drug use as a social problem. This was done using three prototypes: the victim of a sick husband; the prostitute who encourages drug use among the weak in spirit (natural-born criminals); and the virtuous young woman who succumbs to drug addiction in spite of her father's rule. Each figure reinforces the need for state intervention and increased social control.


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Psychotropic Drugs/history , Social Problems/history , Women/history , Substance-Related Disorders/history , Argentina , Sex Work/history , Psychotropic Drugs/administration & dosage , Human Body , Crime Victims/history , Substance-Related Disorders/classification , Paternalism , Drug Users/history , Caregiver Burden/history , Hysteria/history , Morphine Dependence/history
3.
Med Hist ; 63(4): 494-511, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31571698

ABSTRACT

This article considers the social function of contagious disease as moderator of class relationships in England during the first half of the eighteenth century and takes into account the ways in which the 'communicability' of the plague, great pox (syphilis) and smallpox (variola) was used by authors to crystallise social interaction and tension along class lines. The essay begins by examining the representation of the plague, syphilis and smallpox in the medical tradition, before shifting its attention to the practice of maritime quarantine, as laid out by Richard Mead in his Short Discourse Concerning Pestilential Contagion (1720). By foregrounding medical writing on contagion through skin contact, I suggest that pornographic texts such as John Cleland's The Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure (Fanny Hill) (1748) had an interventionist function. Cleland is often charged with sanitising the true horrors of sex work in this period. This article proposes that if we take the time to appreciate the way infectious cutaneous diseases were believed to operate and spread we can recognise the moments in which he not only alludes to disease but invokes it for structural and thematic purposes. In proposing this, I am challenging the dominant interpretation that the problematic realities of eighteenth-century prostitution, especially disease, are subordinated to the narrative's greater interest in erotic pleasure.


Subject(s)
Literature, Modern/history , Medicine in Literature/history , Plague/history , Quarantine/history , Sex Work/history , Smallpox/history , Syphilis/history , Awards and Prizes , Disease Transmission, Infectious/history , Historiography , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , Humans , London , Plague/transmission , Ships/history , Smallpox/transmission , Syphilis/transmission , Textbooks as Topic/history
4.
20 Century Br Hist ; 30(2): 231-263, 2019 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31032861

ABSTRACT

In the 1980s, prostitution resurfaced as the object of feminist politics as second-wave activists grappled with Thatcherism, prostitute rights, tenant activism, anti-violence movements, and changes in the street sex trade and in policing. These conflicting imperatives converged on King's Cross, London. Events in King's Cross highlight some general trends, especially shifts in policing and in the geographic dispersal of the street sex trade. King's Cross also possessed singular features. It was the epicentre of street prostitution in London and the destination for hundreds of northern women migrating to the metropolis to sell sex. Intensified policing of the street trade provoked a heated neighbourhood dispute between council tenants and a media-savvy prostitute rights group. The year 1982 also marked a new configuration in local politics: the control of Camden Council by Labour Left and the formation of the Camden Women's Committee. In this challenging environment, newly elected municipal feminists in Camden set out to devise a feminist practice around prostitution. They found themselves embroiled in local disputes over public space, gender justice, policing, municipal progressivism, and resident action.


Subject(s)
Feminism , Politics , Sex Work/history , History, 20th Century , London
6.
Cult Health Sex ; 20(4): 397-410, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28747104

ABSTRACT

Colonialist views of Indigenous bodies and sexualities continue to affect Indigenous peoples worldwide. For Indigenous Australians, this burden has resulted in repression and oppression of power, sex and desire. Focusing on the sexual intimacies of Indigenous Australian women, this paper provides an account of the dominant Australian historical discourses, finding that Indigenous women were viewed as exotic, erotic, something to be desired, yet simultaneously something to be feared. Our sexualities were described as savage, promiscuous and primitive and we were often viewed as prostitutes with our voices and views constrained by patriarchal and imperial regimes of power. But within this context, Indigenous women fought back through both individual and collective acts of agency. This paper demonstrates how Indigenous Australian women's agency not as a new phenomenon but rather as a position that disrupts the popular discourses of exploitation and victimhood that have been persistently perpetrated against Indigenous women.


Subject(s)
Colonialism , Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander/psychology , Sexual Behavior/ethnology , Women , Australia , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander/history , Sex Work/ethnology , Sex Work/history , Sexual Behavior/psychology , Women/psychology
8.
Buenos Aires; Red de Mujeres Trabajadoras sexuales de Latinoamérica y el Caribe (RedTraSex); 2017. 115 p.
Monography in Spanish | MINSALCHILE | ID: biblio-1545994
9.
Asclepio ; 68(2): 0-0, jul.-dic. 2016. tab, ilus
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-158653

ABSTRACT

A fines del siglo XIX y principios del XX las enfermedades venéreas despertaron especial atención en los discursos médicos, periodísticos y políticos. Las normativas municipales en torno a la cuestión de la prostitución y a un conjunto de problemas propios de ciudades, que como Rosario sufrieron un proceso de modernización brusca, daban cuenta de lo mencionado. La prostitución aparecía vinculada en las representaciones epocales con las enfermedades venéreas, en especial, la sífilis y la blenorragia, caracterizadas junto con el alcoholismo y la tuberculosis como algunos de los grandes males sociales evitables. La prostitución era percibida como el principal foco de difusión de éstas. En este trabajos analizamos discursos sobre las enfermedades venéreas, "secretas", como también se las conocía por entonces, los miedos que despertaban y algunas prácticas profilácticas desplegadas a los efectos de proteger los cuerpos individuales y el cuerpo social de la ciudad en el período de vigencia del sistema de prostitución reglamentada en Rosario (1874-1932) (AU)


In late 19th and early 20th century venereal diseases received special attention in the medical, journalistic and political speeches. Local regulations regarding the issue of prostitution and the tipical problems of cities which, like Rosario, underwent a process of sudden modernization, accounted for this special attention. Prostitution appeared in epochal representations associated with venereal diseases, especially syphilis and gonorrhea, witch, together with alcoholism and tuberculosis, were characterized as some of the major preventable social ills. Prostitution was perceived as the main source of sexually transmitted infections. In this work we analyze discourses on venereal diseases also called "secret" at that time; we also analyse the fears these instilled in society and the prophylactic practices adopted to protect the individual bodies and the social body of the city when the regulated prostitution system was in force in Rosario (1874-1932) (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/epidemiology , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/history , Sex Work/history , Syphilis/epidemiology , Syphilis/history , Alcoholism/epidemiology , Alcoholism/history , Health Policy/history , Health Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Argentina/epidemiology , Sexuality/history , Sexual Behavior/history , Cystitis/epidemiology , Cystitis/history , Cystitis/prevention & control , Sex Education/history , Sex Education/legislation & jurisprudence
10.
Asclepio ; 68(2): 0-0, jul.-dic. 2016. ilus
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-158654

ABSTRACT

La Sociedad Mexicana de Profilaxis Sanitaria y Moral fue fundada en 1908 con el propósito de luchar contra las enfermedades venéreas. A diferencia de iniciativas anteriores de prevención que se centraban en el control sanitario de la prostitución, la Sociedad promovió la creación de dispensarios para la atención médica de los enfermos, así como la difusión de conocimientos por medio de conferencias y de propaganda impresa. Este artículo analiza las ideas que dieron lugar a la fundación de la Sociedad, los principales mensajes que buscaba difundir, los obstáculos y las críticas que enfrentó, y las causas que la llevaron a su disolución en 1923. El artículo muestra que la ciencia y la moral fueron dos elementos centrales que la Sociedad buscó promover, pues sus integrantes asumieron que las enfermedades venéreas eran un problema sanitario y moral, que debía prevenirse con el control de la voluntad y las pasiones, y llegado el caso, tratarse con la ayuda de médicos calificados (AU)


The Mexican Society for Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis was founded in 1908 for the purpose of fighting against venereal diseases. Unlike previous prevention initiatives that focused on sanitary control of prostitution, the Society promoted the creation of dispensaries for medical care for the sick, and the dissemination of knowledge through lectures and printed propaganda. This article analyzes the ideas that led to the founding of the Society, the main messages which it sought to spread, obstacles and criticism it faced, and the causes that led to its dissolution in 1923. The article shows that science and morality were two core elements that the Society sought to promote, since its members assumed that venereal diseases concerned to public health and morals, and that they could be prevented by the control of the will and passions, and if necessary, treated with the help of qualified physicians (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , History, 19th Century , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/history , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/prevention & control , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/epidemiology , Antibiotic Prophylaxis/history , Sex Work/history , Sex Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Mexico/epidemiology , Morale , Morals , Societies, Medical/history
11.
Folia Med (Plovdiv) ; 58(1): 5-11, 2016 03 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27383872

ABSTRACT

The current study presents some aspects of syphilis in the Balkan Peninsula from the 19th century until the Interwar. Ever since the birth of modern Balkan States (Greece, Bulgaria, Turkey and Serbia), urbanization, poverty and the frequent wars have been considered the major factors conducive to the spread of syphilis. The measures against sex work and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) were taken in two aspects, one medical and the other legislative. In this period, numerous hospitals for venereal diseases were established in the Balkan countries. In line with the international diagnostic approach and therapeutic standards, laboratory examinations in these Balkan hospitals included spirochete examination, Wassermann reaction, precipitation reaction and cerebrospinal fluid examination. Despite the strict legislation and the adoption of relevant laws against illegal sex work, public health services were unable to curb the spread of syphilis. Medical and social factors such as poverty, citizen's ignorance of STDs, misguided medical perceptions, lack of sanitary control of prostitution and epidemiological studies, are highlighted in this study. These factors were the major causes that helped syphilis spread in the Balkan countries during the 19th and early 20th century. The value of these aspects as a historic paradigm is diachronic. Failure to comply with the laws and the dysfunction of public services during periods of war or socioeconomic crises are both factors facilitating the spread of STDs.


Subject(s)
Health Policy/history , Poverty/history , Sex Work/history , Syphilis/history , Urbanization/history , Antitreponemal Agents/history , Antitreponemal Agents/therapeutic use , Arsphenamine/history , Arsphenamine/therapeutic use , Balkan Peninsula/epidemiology , Bismuth/history , Bismuth/therapeutic use , Bosnia and Herzegovina/epidemiology , Bulgaria/epidemiology , Government Regulation/history , Greece/epidemiology , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Poverty/statistics & numerical data , Risk Factors , Serbia/epidemiology , Sex Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/epidemiology , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/history , Syphilis/diagnosis , Syphilis/drug therapy , Syphilis/epidemiology , Turkey/epidemiology , Warfare
12.
J Gerontol Soc Work ; 59(4): 332-348, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27352019

ABSTRACT

Prior to and during World War II, thousands of girls and young women were abducted from Korea and forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese government. Termed comfort women, these girls and young women suffered extreme sexual, physical, and emotional abuse and trauma. Research on this group is not well-developed and people know little of the impact of this early life trauma on the lives of these women who are now in later life. Using snowball sampling, 16 older adult survivors of the comfort women system participated in semistructured qualitative interviews. Thematic analysis was conducted to gain an understanding of the trauma that these women suffered and how it impacted their lives. Results revealed the depths of the abuse these women suffered, including repeated rapes, physical beatings, humiliation, forced surgery and sterilization, and social exclusion. These early traumatic experiences appeared to reverberate throughout their lives in their family relations, their inability to marry and to conceive children, and their emotional and physical well-being throughout the life course and into later life. The experiences of these survivors illustrate the lasting impact of early-life trauma and can guide interventions with current survivors of sexual abuse or trafficking.


Subject(s)
Psychological Trauma/complications , Rape/psychology , Sex Work/ethnology , Survivors/psychology , Aged, 80 and over , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Japan , Life Change Events/history , Psychological Trauma/psychology , Qualitative Research , Republic of Korea/ethnology , Sex Work/history , World War II
13.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 23(2): 359-78, 2016 01 26.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27276041

ABSTRACT

This article analyzes the fight against syphilis in Belém, capital of the Brazilian state of Pará, between 1921 and 1924. When Instituto de Profilaxia e Doenças Venéreas (Institute for Prophylaxis and Venereal Diseases) was founded, headed by Dr. Heraclídes de Souza Araújo, many restrictions were imposed on prostitution in a bid to make prostitutes partners in the city's sanitation reform. The documents produced by the institute and published in newspapers of the day reveal the various clashes that occurred between doctors, the civil police force, and prostitutes, highlighting the prostitutes' attitudes to state intervention in their activities.


Subject(s)
Sex Work/history , Syphilis/history , Brazil , History, 20th Century , Humans , Sex Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Syphilis/prevention & control
14.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 23(2): 359-378, abr.-jun. 2016. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-783822

ABSTRACT

O artigo analisa o combate à sífilis em Belém do Pará entre 1921 e 1924. A partir da fundação do Instituto de Profilaxia e Doenças Venéreas, administrado pelo médico Heraclídes de Souza Araújo, muitas restrições foram feitas à prática do meretrício, visando transformar as prostitutas em aliadas da política de higienização da cidade. A documentação produzida pelo Instituto de Profilaxia, bem como jornais da época, revela os vários embates que ocorreram entre médicos, polícia civil e meretrizes, destacando as atitudes destas contra a intervenção do Estado em seu ofício.


This article analyzes the fight against syphilis in Belém, capital of the Brazilian state of Pará, between 1921 and 1924. When Instituto de Profilaxia e Doenças Venéreas (Institute for Prophylaxis and Venereal Diseases) was founded, headed by Dr. Heraclídes de Souza Araújo, many restrictions were imposed on prostitution in a bid to make prostitutes partners in the city’s sanitation reform. The documents produced by the institute and published in newspapers of the day reveal the various clashes that occurred between doctors, the civil police force, and prostitutes, highlighting the prostitutes’ attitudes to state intervention in their activities.


Subject(s)
Female , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/prevention & control , History, 20th Century , Sex Work/history
16.
Med Hist (Barc) ; (4): 4-20, 2016.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29693810

ABSTRACT

During the second half of the XIX century a powerful international health movement appeared as the expression of the political and economic importance of the health-disease relationship. From 1850 a long series of international health conferences on epidemics, hygiene, charity, tuberculosis, mother-baby health and rural health brought together doctors, diplomats and governors from many countries to look for political solutions to the social impact of disease. An international health diplomacy arose from this as a channel for debate and solution to the main health problems. According to official statistics, the elevated prevalence of syphilitics at the beginning of the XX century set off the alarm regarding the problems of preventing and treating the disease. Two international conferences on syphilis were convened. This article analyses the contributions and debates among the international experts, the medico-sanitary, moral and social arguments, and the political reactions, national regulations for prostitution as well as international initiatives and recommendations. The main sources used are national regulations, and the lectures, reports and debates that occurred during the two International Conferences on Syphilis, held in Paris and Brussels between 1998 and 1902.


Subject(s)
Global Health/history , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/history , Syphilis/history , Congresses as Topic/history , Government Regulation/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Sex Work/history , Sex Work/legislation & jurisprudence
17.
Med. hist ; 36(4): 4-20, 2016. ilus
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-158983

ABSTRACT

Durante la segunda mitad del siglo XIX surgió un poderoso movimiento sanitario internacional como expresión de la importancia política y económica del binomio salud-enfermedad. Desde los años 1850 una larga serie de conferencias sanitarias internacionales sobre epidemias, higiene, beneficencia, tuberculosis, salud materno-infantil y sanidad rural reunieron a médicos, diplomáticos y gobernantes de muchos países para buscar soluciones políticas al impacto social de las enfermedades. Surgía así una diplomacia sanitaria internacional como vía de debate y solución de los principales problemas de salud. Según las estadísticas oficiales, la elevada prevalencia de enfermos sifilíticos al iniciarse el siglo XX disparó las alarmas ante los problemas de prevención y tratamiento de la enfermedad. Se convocaron dos conferencias internacionales sobre la sífilis. Este artículo analiza las contribuciones y debates entre los expertos internacionales, los argumentos médico sanitarios, morales y sociales, y las reacciones políticas, las regulaciones nacionales de la prostitución, así como las iniciativas y recomendaciones internacionales. Las principales fuentes utilizadas son las reglamentaciones nacionales, y las ponencias, informes y debates que tuvieron lugar durante las dos Conferencias internacionales sobre la sífilis, celebradas en París y Bruselas, entre 1898 y 1902 (AU)


During the second half of the XIX century a powerful international health movement appeared as the expression of the political and economic importance of the health-disease relationship. From 1850 a long series of international health conferences on epidemics, hygiene, charity, tuberculosis, mother-baby health and rural health brought together doctors, diplomats and governors from many countries to look for political solutions to the social impact of disease. An international health diplomacy arose from this as a channel for debate and solution to the main health problems. According to official statistics, the elevated prevalence of syphilitics at the beginning of the XX century set off the alarm regarding the problems of preventing and treating the disease. Two international conferences on syphilis were convened. This article analyses the contributions and debates among the international experts, the medico-sanitary, moral and social arguments, and the political reactions, national regulations for prostitution as well as international initiatives and recommendations. The main sources used are national regulations, and the lectures, reports and debates that occurred during the two international Conferences on Syphilis, held in Paris and Brussels between 1898 and 1902 (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , History, 19th Century , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/virology , Epidemics/prevention & control , Tuberculosis/pathology , Maternal and Child Health , Syphilis, Congenital/genetics , Communicable Disease Control/methods , Research/standards , Impacts of Polution on Health/policies , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/transmission , Epidemics/classification , Hygiene/standards , Tuberculosis/virology , Physicians/standards , Syphilis, Congenital/transmission , Sex Work/history , Communicable Disease Control/standards , Research/history , Impacts of Polution on Health/prevention & control
19.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 23(2): 359-378, abr. -jun.2016. tab
Article in Portuguese | HISA - History of Health | ID: his-36742

ABSTRACT

O artigo analisa o combate à sífilis em Belém do Pará entre 1921 e 1924. A partir da fundação do Instituto de Profilaxia e Doenças Venéreas, administrado pelo médico Heraclídes de Souza Araújo, muitas restrições foram feitas à prática do meretrício, visando transformar as prostitutas em aliadas da política de higienização da cidade. A documentação produzida pelo Instituto de Profilaxia, bem como jornais da época, revela os vários embates que ocorreram entre médicos, polícia civil e meretrizes, destacando as atitudes destas contra a intervenção do Estado em seu ofício. (AU)


Subject(s)
Sexually Transmitted Diseases/prevention & control , Sex Work/history , Women , History, 20th Century
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