Exhibition of Female Flagellants

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Exhibition of Female Flagellants [BuyIt 1]is an 1830 pornographic novel published by George Cannon in London and attributed, probably falsely, to Theresa Berkley. The principal activity described is flagellation, mainly of women by women, described in a theatrical, fetishistic style. It was republished around 1872 by John Camden Hotten in his series The Library Illustrative of Social Progress, attributed to Theresa Berkley.

Exhibition of Female Flagellants text

References

  • 1 Fowler, Patsy; Jackson, Alan (2003). Launching Fanny Hill: essays on the novel and its influences. AMS studies in the eighteenth century 41. AMS Press. p. 169. isbn 0-404-63541-5.
  • 2. Binhammer, Katherine (2003). "The "Singular Propensity" of Sensibility's Extremities: Female Same-Sex Desire and the Eroticization of Pain in Late-Eighteenth-Century British Culture". GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 9: 471–498. doi:10.1215/10642684-9-4-471.
  • 3. Rachel Potter, "Obscene Modernism and the Trade in Salacious Books", Modernism/modernity, Volume 16, Number 1, January 2009, pp.87-104 doi:10.1353/mod.0.0065 [1]
  • 4. Eliot, Simon (2000). "Hotten: Rotten: Forgotten? An Apologia for a General Publisher". Book History 3: 61–93. doi:10.1353/bh.2000.0007.
  • 5. Prins, Yopie (1999). Victorian Sappho. Princeton University Press. p. 152. isbn 0-691-05919-5.
  • 6. Mudge, Bradford Keyes (2000). The whore's story: women, pornography, and the British novel, 1684-1830. Ideologies of desire. Oxford University Press. p. 246. isbn 0-19-513505-9.

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