Timothy J. Gilfoyle
City of Eros
New York City, Prostitution, and the Commercialization of Sex, 19701920
Winner of the Allan Nevins Prize of the Society of American Historians and
the New York State Historical Association Manuscript Prize
"A wonderful book. The research is overwhelming in breadth, precision, and imagination.
City of Eros beautifully portrays an aspect of social and urban, as well as
economic history, which we can no longer ignore." Mary P. Ryan, University of
California, Berkeley
"Gilfoyle has tied together into one package the interrelationship between the role
and status of women, American ideas about sex, the effects of urbanization and immigration,
real estate speculation, vigilantism, and politics. . . . In short, he has effectively
brought issues of sexuality into social history. . . . Deserving of the highest
praise." Vern L. Bullough, Historian
"A fascinating study. . . . Gilfoyle does not simply catalogue the omnipresence
of the postitutes. He situates their trade in the economic life of the city. . .
. City of Eros is social history at its best, beautifully written, with a
mosaic of rich detail that informs but does not overwhelm the narrative line." David
Nasaw, New York Times Book Review
"Remarkable. . . . [A] clear and fascinating narrative . . . [that] opens up plenty
of new lines of inquiry. . . . A major contribution to the history of gender, popular
culture, and the life of New York City." Elliott J. Gorn, Journal of American
History
"The first careful analysis of the politics, geography, and business of prostitution
in the nation's metropolis. With grace and style, Timothy Gilfoyle has moved the
subject from the shadows to the light." Kenneth T. Jackson, Columbia University
Timothy J. Gilfoyle is assistant professor of history at Loyola University
of Chicago.
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