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  • QAA_Presents_Trickle_Down_E3_White_Slavery_Part_1.mp3
  • QAA_Presents_Trickle_Down_E3_White_Slavery_Part_1.mp3

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Content

In the early 20th Century narratives about “white slavery” led to creation of the White-Slave Traffic Act of 1910, which was wielded by the U.S. federal government to police sexuality. These narratives also helped fuel the growth of the FBI in its early days. But before these narratives arrived in the United States, they first grew in Victorian England. To help expose the horrible truth of the underground sex trade, Evangelical feminist activists fighting for better treatment of prostitutes and the protection of children found common cause with an unscrupulous London journalist named William Stead. But Stead was more interested in selling newspapers than the truth. The result was a horrifying scandal that involved Stead kidnapping a 13 year girl and a deformed narrative about sex trafficking that rippled through history long after his death.

This series is brought to you by the QAA podcast. Thanks for supporting us on patreon!

https://qanonanonymous.com

Written by Travis View. Theme by Nick Sena (https://nicksenamusic.com). Additional music by Pontus Berghe and Nick Sena. Editing by Corey Klotz.

REFERENCES:

Bartley, Paula (1998) Preventing prostitution: the ladies' association for the care and protection of young girls in Birmingham, 1887-1914, Women's History Review

Donovan, Brian (2005) White Slave Crusades: Race, Gender, and Anti-vice Activism, 1887–1917.

Langum, David (1994) Crossing over the Line: Legislating Morality and the Mann Act

Robinson, W. Sidney (2012) Muckraker: The Scandalous Life and Times of W. T. Stead

Schucha, Bonnie (2016) White Slavery in the Northwoods: Early U.S. Anti-Sex Trafficking and Its Continuing Relevance to Trafficking Reform,  William & Mary Journal of Women and the Law

Schults, Raymond (1972) Crusader in Babylon: WT Stead and the Pall Mall Gazette

Walkowitz, Judith (1992) City of Dreadful Delight: Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late-Victorian London

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Comments

Heather B

Great episode! One of my favorite books is “The Crimson Petal & the White” by Michel Faber. The main character was forced into prostitution in Victorian England (by her mother).

Anonymous

Really good episode. Interesting thing about Stead; I took a class in college about Victorian pornographic literature (lmao exactly the type of thing the right probably assumes that liberal colleges are constantly teaching, but it was a fascinating class) and as an exercise my professor gave us two excerpts to read out of context; one from some 19th century porn story, and one from The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon. She then asked us which one we thought was from porn, and which one was from a journalist reformer. We literally couldn't tell. The tone was virtually identical. The salaciousness of Stead's article, out of the moralizing context in which he tried to put it, was not just undeniable but indistinguishable from the text that was openly written as porn. It made for a really interesting discussion. And it's something I think about a lot in terms of the contemporary obsession with a mythical version of human trafficking.

null

Stunning. And informative. Thanks

Billy E. S.

That Titanic reveal is amazing omg. Don't feel too bad for him

Anonymous

Loving this series! Keep ‘em coming!!

Anonymous

I appreciate the reference list! Thank you

Matt Rämen

I laughed out loud finding out that Stead died on the Titanic - it may not be true justice but it’s absolutely poetic.

Deepstate9

I am loving this series - please keep it up