Beschreibung
«Dr. Hammers account of lives of registered prostitutes illustrates the complexity of discourses on medical supervision and police control of sexuality in early twentieth-century Berlin. This English edition provides historians of sexuality with insight into medical experts role in producing social truth and how the women profiled resisted control.» (Deirdre McGowan, Head of Law, School of Social Sciences, Law, and Education, Technological University Dublin) «For anyone interested in the history of prostitution, retrieving the lives and voices of sex workers poses the greatest challenge. This makes Ten Life Histories of Berlin Prostitutes a particularly precious source. Jill Suzanne Smiths and Stephen Carrutherss engagingly written introductions adeptly situate Hammers study in the contexts of Imperial Germany around 1900 and Berlins role as a major center of sexual reform. The translation from the German is eminently readable. Thanks to the editors, English-speaking audiences finally have access to this major document on battles over prostitution at the height of the industrial age.» (Julia Roos, Associate Professor of History, Indiana University, Bloomington) This book is an annotated translation into English of Zehn Lebensläufe Berliner Kontollmädchen und zehn Beiträge zur Behandlung der geschlechtlichen Frage (1905) (Ten Life Histories of Berlin Prostitutes under Police Control and Ten Contributions to the Management of the Sexual Question) by Dr. Wilhelm Hammer (1879-1940(?)). The author worked as an assistant physician at the womens ward at the Berlin municipal homeless shelter in the Fröbelstrasse, where he recorded Ten Life Histories. Dr. Hammer wrote Ten Life Histories as a contribution to the Großstadt-Dokumente [Metropolis Documents], a sociological work in fifty volumes edited by Hans Ostwald (1873-1940) published between 1904 and 1908. In addition to its interest for prostitution research, Ten Life Histories sheds valuable light on aspects of cultural and social life in the German Empire of this period, particularly on the school and welfare systems and, more generally, on womens role in society at the time.
Autorenportrait
Author: Dr. Wilhelm Hammer trained as a doctor in Freiburg and Berlin. In addition to his work at the women's ward in Berlin, he worked as a doctor in a variety of welfare and penal institutions in Switzerland, Austria, Holland and throughout the German Empire. Editors: Stephen Carruthers is a lecturer in the School of Social Sciences, Law, and Education at the Technological University Dublin. His current research interests are in the field of sociology and cultural history. Jill Suzanne Smith is Associate Professor of German at Bowdoin College in Maine, USA. Her research and teaching focus on gender and sexuality, Jewish studies, and the city of Berlin from the Wilhelmine era to the present.