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  1. The Worm in the Bud: The World of Victorian Sexuality.Ronald Pearsall - 1983 - Penguin Group.
    "This classic book on Victorian hypocrisy reveals the other side of Victoria's Britain, and what really went on behind the lace curtains and aspidistras. Ronald Pearsall exposes, with thorough documentation, the bald facts of sex-life (approved and illicit) among the aristocracy, the middle class and poor in the nineteenth century. His curious record is honest, entertaining, and very humorous. It also reflects the conflicting values of the Victorian double standard - one is the very image of respectability, the other is (...)
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  • The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State.Friedrich Engels - 2010 - Penguin Books.
    The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (1884), was a provocative and profoundly influential critique of the Victorian nuclear family. Engels argued that the traditional monogamous household was in fact a recent construct, closely bound up with capitalist societies. Under this patriarchal system, women were servants and, effectively, prostitutes. Only Communism would herald the dawn of communal living and a new sexual freedom and, in turn, the role of the state would become superfluous.
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  • The Double Standard.Keith Thomas - 1959 - Journal of the History of Ideas 20 (1/4):195.
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  • The Welfare of Women in Laboring Families: England, 1860-1950.Laura Oren - 1973 - Feminist Studies 1 (3/4):107.
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  • A History of Factory Legislation.B. L. Hutchins & A. Harrison - 1904 - International Journal of Ethics 14 (3):397-398.
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