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A Woman Lies Bleeding on the Ground: Prostitution and Underground Economy in Nineteenth Century Charleston
Author(s) -
Sarah Pillman Amundson
Publication year - 2017
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Dissertations/theses
DOI - 10.31274/etd-180810-4875
Subject(s) - history , art history
Degree Type Thesis Date of Award 2017 Degree Name Master of Arts Department History Major History First Advisor Kathleen Hilliard Abstract In November of 1882, Charleston madam Fanny Cochran was slain in her doorway by her longtime lover, Emil Hyman. Although this murder sent shockwaves through the city, the events transpired—and the questions it raised—quickly faded from memory. An examination of Fanny Cochran’s life reveals a web of closely connected men and women within the fourth ward of Charleston, South Carolina. These economic actors, many Charleston madams and sex workers, created a system of networks that supplied political and economic capital that would have been otherwise inaccessible to these supposed “powerless” women and connected them to businessmen of the day. They did so by exploiting loose laws on prostitution that allowed them to earn money through the informal economy and, particularly in Cochran’s case, used that capital in the formal economy, revealing the porous flexibility between the two.

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