Sexual blackmail first reached public notice in the late
eighteenth century when laws against sodomy were exploited by the
unscrupulous to extort money from those they could entrap. Angus
McLaren chronicles this parasitic crime, tracing its expansion in
England and the United States through the Victorian era and into
the first half of the twentieth century. The labeling of certain
sexual acts as disreputable, if not actually criminal--abortion,
infidelity, prostitution, and homosexuality--armed would-be
blackmailers and led to a crescendo of court cases and public
scandals in the 1920s and 1930s. As the importance of sexual
respectability was inflated, so too was the spectacle of its
loss.
Charting the rise and fall of sexual taboos and the shifting
tides of shame, McLaren enables us to survey evolving sexual
practices and discussions. He has mined the archives to tell his
story through a host of fascinating characters and cases, from male
bounders to designing women, from badger games to gold diggers,
from victimless crimes to homosexual outing. He shows how these
stories shocked, educated, entertained, and destroyed the lives of
their victims. He also demonstrates how muckraking journalists, con
men, and vengeful women determined the boundaries of sexual
respectability and damned those considered deviant. Ultimately, the
sexual revolution of the 1960s blurred the long-rigid lines of
respectability, leading to a rapid decline of blackmail fears. This
fascinating view of the impact of regulating sexuality from the
late Victorian Age to our own time demonstrates the centrality of
blackmail to sexual practices, deviance, and the law.
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