[1]
Abramson, P.R. and Pinkerton, S.D. 1995. Introduction: Nature, Nurture, and In-Between. Sexual nature, sexual culture. University of Chicago Press. 1–14.
[2]
Alan Hunt 1998. The Great Masturbation Panic and the Discourses of Moral Regulation in Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Britain. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 8, 4 (1998), 575–615.
[3]
Alexander, S. 1994. Review: City of Dreadful Delight, Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late-Victorian London by Judith R. Walkowitz. History Workshop. 38 (1994), 251–254.
[4]
Angus McLaren 1977. Abortion in England, 1890-1914. Victorian Studies. 20, 4 (1977), 379–400.
[5]
Ann R. Higginbotham 1989. ‘Sin of the Age’: Infanticide and Illegitimacy in Victorian London. Victorian Studies. 32, 3 (1989), 319–337.
[6]
Bailey, V. 1981. Policing and punishment in nineteenth-century Britain. Croom Helm.
[7]
Bartley, P. 2000. Prostitution: prevention and reform in England, 1860-1914. Routledge.
[8]
Bates, V. 2015. Sexual forensics in Victorian and Edwardian England: age, crime and consent in the courts. Palgrave Macmillan.
[9]
Bates, V. 2013. ‘So Far as I Can Define without a Microscopical Examination’: Venereal Disease Diagnosis in English Courts, 1850-1914. Social History of Medicine. 26, 1 (2013), 38–55. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hks056.
[10]
Beccalossi, C. and Crozier, I. 2011. A cultural history of sexuality in the age of Empire. Berg.
[11]
Bland, L. 2001. Banishing the beast: feminism, sex and morality. Tauris Parke.
[12]
Bland, L. 1992. ‘Purifying’ the public world: feminist vigilantes in late Victorian England. Women’s History Review. 1, 3 (1992), 397–412. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09612029200200013.
[13]
Bland, L. and Doan, L.L. 1998. Sexology in culture: labelling bodies and desires. Polity Press.
[14]
Bourke, J. 2008. Rape Myths. Rape: a history from 1860 to the present day. Virago. 21–49.
[15]
Brickell, C. 2006. A symbolic interactionist history of sexuality? Rethinking History. 10, 3 (2006), 415–432. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13642520600816197.
[16]
Bristow, E.J. 1977. Vice and vigilance: purity movements in Britain since 1700. Gill and Macmillan [etc.].
[17]
Bristow, J. 1998. Chapter 5: Symonds’s History, Ellis’s Heredity: Sexual Inversion. Sexology in culture: labelling bodies and desires. Polity Press. 79–99.
[18]
Bristow, J. 2007. Remapping the Sites of Modern Gay History: Legal Reform, Medico-Legal Thought, Homosexual Scandal, Erotic Geography. The Journal of British Studies. 46, 01 (2007), 116–142. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/508401.
[19]
Brown, A. and Barrett, D. 2002. Chapter 2: Debating late nineteenth-century child prostitution. Knowledge of evil: child prostitution and child sexual abuse in twentieth-century England. Willan. 13–37.
[20]
Buckton, O.S. 1998. Chapter 2. Secret selves: confession and same-sex desire in Victorian autobiography. University of North Carolina Press.
[21]
Bullough, V.L. et al. 1987. Women and prostitution: a social history. Prometheus Books.
[22]
Buydens, Norma Lorraine 2007. Rape and ‘consent to force’ : legal doctrine and social context in Victorian Britain.
[23]
Campbell, P.J. 1979. Sex education books for young adults, 1892-1979. R. R. Bowker Company.
[24]
Cardyn, L. 2001. The Construction of Female Sexual Trauma in Turn-of-the-Century American Mental Medicine. Traumatic pasts: history, psychiatry, and trauma in the modern age, 1870-1930. Cambridge University Press. 172–201.
[25]
Carol Zisowitz Stearns and Peter N. Stearns 1985. Victorian Sexuality: Can Historians Do It Better? Journal of Social History. 18, 4 (1985), 625–634.
[26]
Carolyn A. Conley 1986. Rape and Justice in Victorian England. Victorian Studies. 29, 4 (1986), 519–536.
[27]
Carroll, S.K. 2010. Putting the ‘Neo’ Back into Neo-Victorian: The Neo-Victorian Novel as Postmodern Revisionist Fiction. Neo-Victorian Studies. 3, (2010), 172–205.
[28]
Clark, A. 2008. Desire: a history of European sexuality. Routledge.
[29]
Clark, A. 2008. Desire: a history of European sexuality. Routledge.
[30]
Clark, A. 1983. Rape or Seduction? A Controversy over Sexual Violence in the Nineteenth Century. The Sexual dynamics of history: men’s power, women’s resistance. Pluto Press. 13–27.
[31]
Clark, A. 2011. Were the Victorians Sexually Repressed? The history of sexuality in Europe: a sourcebook and reader. Routledge.
[32]
Cocks, H.G. 2013. Chapter 2: Approaches to the History of Sexuality since 1750. The Routledge History of Sex and the Body: 1500 to the Present. Routledge. 38–54.
[33]
Cocks, H.G. 2003. Nameless offences: homosexual desire in the nineteenth century. I.B. Tauris.
[34]
Cocks, H.G. and Houlbrook, M. 2005. Palgrave Advances in the Modern History of Sexuality. Palgrave Macmillan.
[35]
Cohen, D. 2013. Family secrets: living with shame from the Victorians to the present day. Viking.
[36]
Colligan, C. 2006. The traffic in obscenity from Byron to Beardsley: sexuality and exoticism in nineteenth-century print culture. Palgrave Macmillan.
[37]
Conley, C. 1991. The unwritten law: criminal justice in Victorian Kent. Oxford University Press.
[38]
Cook, H. 2011. The Long Sexual Revolution: English Women, Sex, and Contraception 1800-1975. The history of sexuality in Europe: a sourcebook and reader. Routledge.
[39]
Cox, P. 2007. Compulsion, Voluntarism, and Venereal Disease: Governing Sexual Health in England after the Contagious Diseases Acts. The Journal of British Studies. 46, 01 (2007), 91–115. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/508400.
[40]
Crowther, M.A. and White, B. 1988. On soul and conscience: the medical expert and crime : 150 years of forensic medicine in Glasgow. Aberdeen University Press.
[41]
Crozier, I. 2005. "All the Appearances Were Perfectly Natural”: The Anus of the Sodomite in Nineteenth-Century Medical Discourse. Body parts: critical explorations in corporeality. Lexington Books. 65–84.
[42]
Crozier, I. 2013. Chapter 8: (De-)constructing Sexual Kinds since 1750. The Routledge history of sex and the body: 1500 to the present. Routledge.
[43]
Crozier, I. 2008. Nineteenth-Century British Psychiatric Writing about Homosexuality before Havelock Ellis: The Missing Story. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 63, 1 (2008), 65–102. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/jhmas/jrm046.
[44]
Crozier, I. and Rees, G. 2012. Making a Space for Medical Expertise: Medical Knowledge of Sexual Assault and the Construction of Boundaries between Forensic Medicine and the Law in Late Nineteenth-century England. Law, Culture and the Humanities. 8, 2 (2012), 285–304. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/1743872111429918.
[45]
CROZIER, I.D. 2000. Taking Prisoners: Havelock Ellis, Sigmund Freud, and the Construction of Homosexuality, 1897-1951. Social History of Medicine. 13, 3 (2000), 447–466. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/13.3.447.
[46]
Cullwick, H. and Stanley, L. 1984. The diaries of Hannah Cullwick, Victorian maidservant. Virago.
[47]
Davidoff, L. 1979. Class and Gender in Victorian England: The Diaries of Arthur J. Munby and Hannah Cullwick. Feminist Studies. 5, 1 (1979). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3177552.
[48]
Davidson, R. 2001. ‘This Pernicious Delusion’: Law, Medicine, and Child Sexual Abuse in Early-Twentieth-Century Scotland. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 10, 1 (2001), 62–77. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/sex.2001.0006.
[49]
Davidson, R. and Hall, L.A. 2001. Sex, sin and suffering: venereal disease and European society since 1870. Routledge.
[50]
D’Cruze, S. 2003. Crimes of outrage: sex, violence and Victorian working women. Routledge.
[51]
D’Cruze, S. and Jackson, L.A. 2009. Women, crime and justice in England since 1660. Palgrave Macmillan.
[52]
Deborah Gorham 1978. The ‘Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon’ Re-Examined: Child Prostitution and the Idea of Childhood in Late-Victorian England. Victorian Studies. 21, 3 (1978), 353–379.
[53]
Degler, C.N. 1974. What Ought To Be and What Was: Women’s Sexuality in the Nineteenth Century. The American Historical Review. 79, 5 (1974).
[54]
Dennis, A. 2008. "Ladies in Peril”: Sarah Waters on Neo-Victorian Narrative Celebrations and Why She Stopped Writing About the Victorian Era. Neo-Victorian Studies. 1, (2008), 41–52.
[55]
Edmonson, J. 2011. An Enquiry into the Causes of the Great Sanitary Failure of the State Regulation of Social Vice. The history of sexuality in Europe: a sourcebook and reader. Routledge.
[56]
Ellis, H. Studies in the Psychology of Sex.
[57]
Emily Dickinson’s Letters to Susan Gilbert: http://www.sappho.com/letters/e_dickinsn.html.
[58]
Evans, T. 2013. Chapter 14: Knowledge and Experience: From 1750 to the 1960s. The Routledge history of sex and the body: 1500 to the present. Routledge.
[59]
Ferguson, F. 2004. Pornography, the theory: what utilitarianism did to action. University of Chicago Press.
[60]
Fisher, T. 1997. Prostitution and the Victorians. Sutton.
[61]
Flegel, M. 2009. Conceptualizing cruelty to children in nineteenth-century England: literature, representation, and the NSPCC. Ashgate.
[62]
Foucault, M. 1984. The history of sexuality: Vol.1: An introduction. Penguin Books.
[63]
Foucault, M. 1984. The history of sexuality: Vol.1: An introduction. Penguin Books.
[64]
Foucault, M. 1986. 'We "Other Victorians”/ The Repressive Hypothesis’ [from The History of Sexuality]. The Foucault reader. Penguin Books.
[65]
Furneaux, H. 2011. Victorian Sexualities. Literature Compass. 8, 10 (2011), 767–775. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1741-4113.2011.00834.x.
[66]
Garton, S. 2004. Chapter 6: Victorianism. Histories of sexuality: antiquity to sexual revolution. Equinox. 101–123.
[67]
Garton, S. 2004. Histories of sexuality: antiquity to sexual revolution. Equinox.
[68]
Garton, S. 2004. Histories of sexuality: antiquity to sexual revolution. Equinox.
[69]
Garton, S. 2004. Histories of sexuality: antiquity to sexual revolution. Equinox.
[70]
George C. Gross 1972. Mary Cowden Clarke, ‘The Girlhood of Shakespeare’s Heroines,’ and the Sex Education of Victorian Women. Victorian Studies. 16, 1 (1972), 37–58.
[71]
Gillis, J.R. 1979. Servants, Sexual Relations, and the Risks of Illegitimacy in London, 1801-1900. Feminist Studies. 5, 1 (1979). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3177553.
[72]
Hadley, L. 2010. Neo-Victorian fiction and historical narrative: the Victorians and us. Palgrave Macmillan.
[73]
Hall, L. 2003. ‘It was affecting the medical profession’: The history of masturbatory insanity revisited. Paedagogica Historica. 39, 6 (2003), 685–699. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/0030923032000128854.
[74]
Hall, L. 1999. "War Always Brings It On: War, STDs, the Military and the Civilian Population in Britain, 1850-1950. Medicine and modern warfare. Rodopi. 205–223.
[75]
Hall, L.A. 1994. ‘The English Have Hot-Water Bottles’: The Morganatic Marriage between the British Medical Profession and Sexology since William Acton. Sexual knowledge, sexual science: the history of attitudes to sexuality. Cambridge University Press. 350–366.
[76]
Hall, L.A. 2000. The Victorian Background. Sex, gender and social change in Britain since 1880. Macmillan Press.
[77]
Halperin, D.M. 1993. ‘Is there a History of Sexuality?’ The lesbian and gay studies reader. Routledge. 416–431.
[78]
Halwani, R. 1998. Essentialism, Social Constructionism, and the History of Homosexuality. Journal of Homosexuality. 35, 1 (1998), 25–51. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1300/J082v35n01_02.
[79]
Hawkes, G. and Scott, J.G. 2005. Perspectives in human sexuality. Oxford University Press.
[80]
Heilmann, A. and Llewellyn, M. 2010. Neo-Victorianism: the Victorians in the twenty-first century, 1999-2009. Palgrave Macmillan.
[81]
Hossain, S. 2007. Antipodean Intimacies: Medical Sex Advice for Women in the Australian Colonies, 1857–1890. Australian Feminist Studies. 22, 52 (2007), 89–105. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/08164640601145087.
[82]
Imber, M. 1982. Toward a Theory of Curriculum Reform: An Analysis of the First Campaign for Sex Education. Curriculum Inquiry. 12, 4 (1982). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1179488.
[83]
Irwin, M.A. 1996. ‘White Slavery’ As Metaphor Anatomy of a Moral Panic. Ex Post Facto: The History Journal. 5, (1996).
[84]
Jackson, L.A. 2000. Child sexual abuse in Victorian England. Routledge.
[85]
Jackson, L.A. 2000. Child sexual abuse in Victorian England. Routledge.
[86]
Jackson, L.A. 1999. Family, Community and the Regulation of Child Sexual Abuse: London, 1870-1914. Childhood in question: children, parents and the state. Manchester University Press. 133–151.
[87]
Jackson, M. 1994. Chapter 2. The real facts of life: feminism and the politics of sexuality, 1850-1940. Taylor & Francis.
[88]
Jackson, S. and Scott, S. 1996. Feminism and sexuality: a reader. Edinburgh University Press.
[89]
Jensen, R.E. 2010. Dirty words: the rhetoric of public sex education, 1870-1924. University of Illinois Press.
[90]
John D. DeLamater and Janet Shibley Hyde 1998. Essentialism vs. Social Constructionism in the Study of Human Sexuality. The Journal of Sex Research. 35, 1 (1998), 10–18.
[91]
Judith R. Walkowitz and Daniel J. Walkowitz 1973. ‘We Are Not Beasts of the Field’: Prostitution and the Poor in Plymouth and Southampton under the Contagious Diseases Acts. Feminist Studies. 1, 3/4 (1973), 73–106.
[92]
Julia A. Laite and Mary Gordon 2008. Taking Nellie Johnson’s Fingerprints: Prostitutes and Legal Identity in Early Twentieth-Century London. History Workshop Journal. 65, 1 (2008), 96–116.
[93]
Kendrick, W.M. 1996. The secret museum: pornography in modern culture. University of California Press.
[94]
Kern, S. 2006. When Did the Victorian Period End? Relativity, Sexuality, Narrative. Journal of Victorian Culture. 11, 2 (2006), 326–338. DOI:https://doi.org/10.3366/jvc.2006.11.2.326.
[95]
Kolsky, E. 2010. The Body Evidencing the Crime: Rape on Trial in Colonial India, 1860-1947. Gender & History. 22, 1 (2010), 109–130. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0424.2009.01581.x.
[96]
Koski, L. 1996. Sexual Metaphors in Emily Dickinson’s Letters to Susan Gilbert. The Emily Dickinson Journal. 5, 2 (1996), 26–31. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/edj.0.0159.
[97]
Kuefler, M. 2007. Chapter 10. The history of sexuality sourcebook. Broadview Press.
[98]
Laite, J. 2012. Common prostitutes and ordinary citizens: commercial sex in London, 1885-1960. Palgrave Macmillan.
[99]
Letter on the Cleveland Street scandal: 1889. http://www.bbk.ac.uk/deviance/sexuality/shaw/18-7-1%20shaw.htm.
[100]
Levine, P. 2003. Prostitution, race and politics: policing venereal disease in the British Empire. Routledge.
[101]
Levine, P. 2011. Prostitution, Race and Politics: Venereal Disease and the British Empire. The history of sexuality in Europe: a sourcebook and reader. Routledge.
[102]
Lewis, T. 2003. Legislating Morality: Victorian and Modern Legal Responses to Pornography. Behaving badly: social panic and moral outrage : Victorian and modern parallels. Ashgate. 143–158.
[103]
Lisa Carstens 2011. Unbecoming Women: Sex Reversal in the Scientific Discourse on Female Deviance in Britain, 1880–1920. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 20, 1 (2011), 62–94.
[104]
Lisa Z. Sigel 2000. Name Your Pleasure: The Transformation of Sexual Language in Nineteenth-Century British Pornography. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 9, 4 (2000), 395–419.
[105]
Lupton, D. 1997. Foucault and the Medicalisation Critique. Foucault, health and medicine. Routledge. 94–110.
[106]
Lutz, D. 2011. Pleasure bound: Victorian sex rebels and the new eroticism. W.W. Norton & Company.
[107]
M. Jeanne Peterson 1986. Dr. Acton’s Enemy: Medicine, Sex, and Society in Victorian England. Victorian Studies. 29, 4 (1986), 569–590.
[108]
Marcus, S. 2011. Between Women: Friendship, Desire, and Marriage in Victorian England. The history of sexuality in Europe: a sourcebook and reader. Routledge.
[109]
Marcus, S. 2009. The other Victorians: a study of sexuality and pornography in mid-nineteenth-century England. Transaction.
[110]
Marshall, J. 1980. Pansies, Perverts and Macho Men: Changing Conceptions of Male Homosexuality. The making of the modern homosexual. Hutchinson. 133–154.
[111]
Mary Lynn Stewart 1997. ‘Science Is Always Chaste’: Sex Education and Sexual Initiation in France, 1880s-1930s. Journal of Contemporary History. 32, 3 (1997), 381–394.
[112]
Mason, M. 1994. The making of Victorian sexuality: sexual behaviour and its understanding. Oxford University Press.
[113]
Matus, J.L. 1995. Unstable bodies: Victorian representations of sexuality and maternity. Manchester University Press.
[114]
Matus, J.L. 1995. Unstable bodies: Victorian representations of sexuality and maternity. Manchester University Press.
[115]
McCormick, D. 1992. Erotic Literature: a connoisseur’s guide. Continuum International.
[116]
McHugh, P. 1980. Prostitution and Victorian social reform. Croom Helm.
[117]
McLaren, A. 1994. Chapter. Sexual knowledge, sexual science: the history of attitudes to sexuality. Cambridge University Press.
[118]
McLaren, A. 1999. Twentieth-century sexuality: a history. Blackwell.
[119]
Miller, A.H. and Adams, J.E. 1996. Sexualities in Victorian Britain. Indiana University Press.
[120]
Mitchell, K. 2010. History and cultural memory in neo-Victorian fiction: Victorian afterimages. Palgrave Macmillan.
[121]
Mooney, G. 1999. Public Health versus Private Practice: The Contested Development of Compulsory Infectious Disease Notification in Late-Nineteenth Century Britain. Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 73, 2 (1999), 238–267. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/bhm.1999.0087.
[122]
Moran, J.P. 2000. Teaching sex: the shaping of adolescence in the 20th century. London.
[123]
Morgan, S. 2000. Faith, sex and purity: the religio-feminist theory of Ellice Hopkins. Women’s History Review. 9, 1 (2000), 13–34. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09612020000200235.
[124]
Muller, N. 2012. Chapter 6: Sexual F(r)ictions: Pornography in Neo-Victorian Women’s Fiction. The female figure in contemporary historical fiction. Palgrave Macmillan. 115–134.
[125]
Nancy F. Cott 1978. Passionlessness: An Interpretation of Victorian Sexual Ideology, 1790-1850. Signs. 4, 2 (1978), 219–236.
[126]
Nead, L. 1988. Myths of sexuality: representations of women in Victorian Britain. Blackwell.
[127]
Nead, L. 2000. Victorian Babylon: people, streets and images in nineteenth-century London. Yale University Press.
[128]
Nelson, C. and Martin, M.H. 2004. Sexual pedagogies: sex education in Britain, Australia, and America, 1879-2000. Palgrave Macmillan.
[129]
Neuman, R.P. 1978. Review: Recent Work on the History of Sexuality: Madonnas and Magdalens. The Origins and Development of Victorian Sexual Attitudes by Eric Trudgill. Journal of Social History. 11, 3 (1978), 419–425.
[130]
Nye, R.A. 1999. Masturbation. Sexuality. Oxford University Press. 137–142.
[131]
Nye, R.A. 1999. Sexuality. Oxford University Press.
[132]
Nye, R.A. 1999. Sexuality. Oxford University Press.
[133]
Oosterhuis, H. 2011. Stepchildren of Nature: Krafft-Ebing, Psychiatry, and the Making of Sexual Identity. The history of sexuality in Europe: a sourcebook and reader. Routledge.
[134]
Oram, A. and Turnbull, A. 2001. The lesbian history sourcebook: love and sex between women in Britain from 1780 to 1970. Routledge.
[135]
Padgug, R.A. 1979. ‘Sexual Matters: On Conceptualizing Sexuality in History. Radical History Review. 20, (1979), 3–23.
[136]
Pearson, M. 1972. The age of consent: Victorian prostitution and its enemies. David and Charles.
[137]
Pearson, M. 1972. The age of consent: Victorian prostitution and its enemies. David and Charles.
[138]
Pedersen, J.E. 1998. Something mysterious: Sex education, Victorian morality, and Durkheim’s comparative sociology. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 34, 2 (1998), 135–151.
[139]
Petrie, G. 1971. A singular iniquity: the campaigns of Josephine Butler. Macmillan.
[140]
Phillips, K.M. and Reay, B. 2002. Sexualities in history: a reader. Routledge.
[141]
Phillips, R. 2002. Imperialism and the regulation of sexuality: colonial legislation on contagious diseases and ages of consent. Journal of Historical Geography. 28, 3 (2002), 339–362. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1006/jhge.2002.0456.
[142]
Phipps, A. 2009. Rape and Respectability: Ideas about Sexual Violence and Social Class. Sociology. 43, 4 (2009), 667–683. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038509105414.
[143]
Pilcher, J. 2005. School sex education: policy and practice in England 1870 to 2000. Sex Education. 5, 2 (2005), 153–170. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/14681810500038848.
[144]
Popple, S. 2005. Photography, vice and the moral dilemma in Victorian Britain. Early Popular Visual Culture. 3, 2 (2005), 113–133. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/17460650500197479.
[145]
Porter, R. 1986. Rape - Does It Have A Historical Meaning? Rape. Basil Blackwell. 216–236.
[146]
Porter, R. and Hall, L. 1995. Chapter 6: The Victorian Polyphony, 1850-85. The facts of life: the creation of sexual knowledge in Britain, 1650 - 1950. Yale University Press. 132–154.
[147]
Roberts, M.J.D. 2004. Making English morals: voluntary association and moral reform in England, 1787-1886. Cambridge University Press.
[148]
Rosenman, E.B. 2003. Unauthorized pleasures: accounts of Victorian erotic experience. Cornell University Press.
[149]
Ross, E. and Rapp, R. 1981. Sex and Society: A Research Note from Social History and Anthropology1. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 1 (1981). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0010417500009683.
[150]
Rowbotham, J. and Stevenson, K. 2003. Behaving badly: social panic and moral outrage : Victorian and modern parallels. Ashgate.
[151]
Rubin, G. 1992. Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality. Pleasure and danger: exploring female sexuality. Pandora. 267–293.
[152]
Russett, C.E. 1989. Sexual science: the Victorian construction of womanhood. Harvard University Press.
[153]
Sauerteig, L.D.H. and Davidson, R. 2009. Shaping the Sexual Knowledge of the Young: Introduction. Shaping sexual knowledge: a cultural history of sex education in twentieth century Europe. Routledge. 1–15.
[154]
Savage, G.H. Case of Sexual Perversion in a Man.
[155]
Schults, R.L. 1972. Crusader in Babylon: W.T. Stead and the Pall Mall gazette. University of Nebraska Press.
[156]
Schulz, D. 1996. Redressing Oscar: Performance and the Trials of Oscar Wilde. TDR (1988-). 40, 2 (1996). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1146528.
[157]
Seidman, S. et al. 2012. Introducing the new sexuality studies: original essays and interviews. Routledge.
[158]
Shore, H. and Jackson, L.A. 1999. The Child’s Word in Court: Cases of Sexual Abuse in London, 1870-1914. Gender and crime in modern Europe. UCL Press. 222–237.
[159]
Sigel, L.Z. 2013. Chapter 12: Looking at Sex: Pornography and Erotica since 1750. The Routledge history of sex and the body: 1500 to the present. Routledge. 223–236.
[160]
Sigel, L.Z. 2000. Filth in the Wrong People’a Hands: Postcards and the Expansion of Pornography in Britain and the Atlantic World, 1880-1914. Journal of Social History. 33, 4 (2000), 859–885. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/jsh.2000.0084.
[161]
Sigel, L.Z. 2002. Governing pleasures: pornography and social change in England, 1815-1914. Rutgers University Press.
[162]
Sigel, L.Z. 2005. International exposure: perspectives on modern European pornography, 1800-2000. Rutgers University Press.
[163]
Sigsworth, E.M. and Wyke, T.J. 1972. A Study of Victorian Prostitution and Venereal Disease. Suffer and be still: women in the Victorian age. Indiana U.P.
[164]
Smith, A. 1996. The Victorian nude: sexuality, morality and art. Manchester University Press.
[165]
Smith, F.B. 1971. Ethics and Disease in the Later Nineteenth Century: The Contagious Diseases Acts. Historical studies. 15, (1971), 118–135.
[166]
SMITH, F.B. 1990. The Contagious Diseases Acts Reconsidered. Social History of Medicine. 3, 2 (1990), 197–215. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/3.2.197.
[167]
Springhall, J. 1998. Youth, popular culture and moral panics: penny gaffs to gangsta-rap, 1830-1996. St. Martin’s Press.
[168]
Stephen Robertson 1998. Signs, Marks, and Private Parts: Doctors, Legal Discourses, and Evidence of Rape in the United States, 1823-1930. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 8, 3 (1998), 345–388.
[169]
Steven Seidman 1990. The Power of Desire and the Danger of Pleasure: Victorian Sexuality Reconsidered. Journal of Social History. 24, 1 (1990), 47–67.
[170]
Stevenson, K. 1999. Observations on the Law Relating to Sexual Offences: the Historic Scandal of Women’s Silence’. Web Journal of Current Legal Issues. (1999).
[171]
Storch, R.D. 1977. Police Control of Street Prostitution in Victorian London: A Study in the Contexts of Police Action. Police and society. Sage Publications. 49–72.
[172]
Strong, B. 1972. Ideas of the Early Sex Education Movement in America, 1890-1920. History of Education Quarterly. 12, 2 (1972). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/366974.
[173]
Sweet, M. 2001. Introduction: Inventing the Victorians. Inventing the Victorians. Faber. ix–xxiii.
[174]
Symonds, J.A. and Grosskurth, P. 1984. The memoirs of John Addington Symonds. Hutchinson.
[175]
The Boulton and Park case: http://www.bbk.ac.uk/deviance/sexuality/anonymous/18-8-1%20boulton%20park.htm.
[176]
The Trial of Oscar Wilde: http://www.famous-trials.com/wilde.
[177]
Thompson, K. 1998. Moral panics. Routledge.
[178]
Thorp, J. 1992. Review: The Social Construction of Homosexuality. Phoenix. 46, 1 (1992). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1088774.
[179]
Timm, A.F. and Sanborn, J.A. 2007. Gender, sex, and the shaping of modern Europe: a history from the French Revolution to the present day. Berg.
[180]
Upchurch, C. 2000. Forgetting the Unthinkable: Cross-Dressers and British Society in the Case of the Queen vs. Boulton and Others. Gender & History. 12, 1 (2000), 127–157. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0424.00174.
[181]
Vicinus, M. 1977. A widening sphere: changing roles of Victorian women. Indiana University Press.
[182]
Vicinus, M. et al. 1982. Sexuality and Power: A Review of Current Work in the History of Sexuality. Feminist Studies. 8, 1 (1982). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3177583.
[183]
Vicinus, M. 1972. Suffer and be still: women in the Victorian age. Indiana U.P.
[184]
Von Krafft-Ebing, R. 2011. Psychopathia Sexualis. The history of sexuality in Europe: a sourcebook and reader. Routledge.
[185]
Walkowitz, J.R. 1992. Chapter 3. City of dreadful delight : narratives of sexual danger in late-Victorian London. University of Chicago Press.
[186]
Walkowitz, J.R. et al. 1972. Notes on the History of Victorian Prostitution. Feminist Studies. 1, 1 (1972). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3180108.
[187]
Walkowitz, J.R. 1980. Prostitution and Victorian society: women, class, and the state. Cambridge University Press.
[188]
Webb, P. 1982. Victorian Erotica. The sexual dimension in literature. Vision.
[189]
Weeks, J. 2012. Sex, Politics and Society: the Regulations of Sexuality since 1800. Pearson Education Limited.
[190]
Weeks, J. 2010. Sexuality. Routledge.
[191]
Weeks, J. 1985. Sexuality and its discontents: meaning, myths and modern sexualities. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
[192]
Wiener, M.J. 1997. New Women vs. Old Men?: sexual danger and social narratives in later Victorian England. Journal of Victorian Culture. 2, 2 (1997), 302–310. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13555509709505955.
[193]
Wieringa, S. 2002. Essentialism versus Constructivism: Time for a Rapprochement? Gendered realities: essays in Caribbean feminist thought. University of the West Indies Press. 3–21.
[194]
1704. Aristotle’s Masterpiece.
[195]
2011. I Know My Own Heart. The history of sexuality in Europe: a sourcebook and reader. Routledge.
[196]
The Victorians: Gender and Sexuality.