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Jewish Pimps, Prostitutes and Campaigners in a Transnational German and British Context, 1875–1940

Subject Area Modern and Contemporary History
Religious Studies and Jewish Studies
Term since 2019
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 429039799
 
This research project draws on the expertise of a project group specializing in the study of gender, antisemitism and migration to investigate the phenomenon of Jewish involvement in the sex trade. While in the late nineteenth century up until the Second World War, Jews were consistently demonized by antisemites because of their role in the trade as prostitutes, pimps and brothel owners, they have featured only marginally in recent studies of prostitution that in recent years has experienced a renewed interest. Since 2020, two postdoctoral researchers have explored Jews and the sex trade, 1875-1940, in British, German and transnational contexts. Largely neglected by historians of Jewish history, and the history of Antisemitism this research project looks beyond institutional frameworks that governed the everyday lives of Jewish prostitutes in the age of the great Jewish migration to expose a new understanding of international mobility in the era of modern globalization. Our research project shows that Jewish prostitutes were never merely passive objects. This study of Jewish prostitutes places the women center stage and unravels their agency behind moral politics, criminalization, and male fantasies. Such an approach allows us to recast the focus away from politicians, state reformers and national anti-trafficking campaigners, to consider the Jewish women’s experiences as historical actors as they navigated unfamiliar relationships with men (pimps, physicians, judges and the police) who exercised control over their bodies. Both the UK and Germany housed ports and other spatial sites that are key to analyzing Jews’ interaction with the sex trade. An understanding of how Jewish women navigated the gendered spaces and the metaphorical codings of Bremen, Hamburg, Portsmouth and Southampton reveals their power of negotiation and highlight their agency. Daniel Lee (PI), Stefanie Fischer (PI) mentor the postdoctoral historians who use unpublished and recently-released sources and testimonies. Our main objective is to produce a more nuanced interpretation of the ties between sex work, migration and trafficking in persons and to build a UK-German network that helps fight human trafficking. Through network meetings, training sessions, and public workshops, the research project aims to communicate ist findings beyond traditional academic circles so that it will, ultimately, have an impact on law and law enforcement, and help reduce vulnerabilities for sex workers and victims of human trafficking.
DFG Programme Research Grants
International Connection United Kingdom
Cooperation Partner Professor Dr. Daniel Lee
 
 

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