Brad Beaven
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Sex work and Ratcliffe Highway
Brothels, crime, and matriarchal networks
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Sex work and Ratcliffe Highway: Brothels, crime, and matriarchal networks This chapter focuses on the women who worked in the sex industry on Ratcliffe Highway and recovers their encounters with sailors, brothel keepers, and ‘pimps’. It will contrast the experiences of sex workers locked into a cycle of exploitation and violence with other women who lived on the margins of the sex industry and were able to exert some agency in a hostile and bleak environment. We shall explore how ports were often contact zones for women living in destitution as waterfront communities provided spaces to foster female environments where they could earn money from sailors and the wider sailortown economy. The chapter will investigate how micro-matriarchal networks evolved in the streets and alleys off Ratcliffe Highway and how women adopted survival strategies that gave themselves a degree of agency in poverty-stricken environments.

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The devil’s highway

Urban anxieties and subaltern cultures in London’s sailortown, c. 1850–1900.

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