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Empire of Purity

The History of Americans' Global War on Prostitution

#162 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

How the US crusade against prostitution became a tool of empire
Between the 1870s and 1930s, American social reformers, working closely with the US government, transformed sexual vice into an international political and humanitarian concern. As these activists worked to eradicate prostitution and trafficking, they promoted sexual self-control for both men and women as a cornerstone of civilization and a basis of American exceptionalism. Empire of Purity traces the history of these efforts, showing how the policing and penalization of sexuality was used to justify American interventions around the world.
Eva Payne describes how American reformers successfully pushed for international anti-trafficking agreements that mirrored US laws, calling for states to criminalize prostitution and restrict migration, and harming the very women they claimed to protect. She argues that Americans' ambitions to reshape global sexual morality and law advanced an ideology of racial hierarchy that viewed women of color, immigrants, and sexual minorities as dangerous vectors of disease. Payne tells the stories of the sex workers themselves, revealing how these women's experiences defy the dichotomies that have shaped American cultural and legal conceptions of prostitution and trafficking, such as choice and coercion, free and unfree labor, and white sexual innocence and the assumed depravity of nonwhites.
Drawing on archives in Europe, the United States, and Latin America, Empire of Purity ties the war on sexual vice to American imperial ambitions and a politicization of sexuality that continues to govern both domestic and international policy today.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 4, 2024
      In this impressive debut, historian Payne demonstrates how the U.S. utilized the “ ‘problem’ of commercial sex” abroad as a means of furthering its imperial ambitions. In the 1870s, as a battle played out on U.S. soil among government officials and activists over whether to regulate prostitution or ban it outright, a notion of American “sexual exceptionalism” was promoted by the reform-minded activists who eventually won out. According to Payne, the idea that Americans were uniquely able to regulate their sexuality came to serve as justification for American colonial projects as “civilizing” missions involving the regulation of prostitution. Tracing numerous such examples through the 1930s—mainly in the Philippines and several Caribbean colonies—Payne shows that these efforts were less about actually improving conditions for women (in fact they rarely did so, driving women into more dangerously illicit working conditions) but were instead about preserving racial hierarchies between U.S. troops and local women of color, as well as promoting a false “moral” distinction between the U.S. empire and the European empires it was replacing. Payne also uses this history as an intriguing window into how American imperialism functioned as a partnership between government and private philanthropic interests. Rigorous and well articulated, this is an enlightening new perspective on U.S. imperial history.

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  • English

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