Publications

 

Books:

The Bawdy Politic(Ashgate 2004) examines the way tropes and conventions about common prostitutes were transformed into arguments that helped the newly restored Stuart monarchy mitigate democratic energies still lingering after England’s civil wars and the Interregnum.  Sex work, partisans repeatedly asserted, inherently disrupted ancestral systems of property transfer and distribution in favour of personal ownership, while the republican belief that all men owned the labour of their body achieved a nightmarish incarnation in the prostitute's understanding that the sexual favours she performed were labour. The prostitute's body thus emerged in the loyalist imagination as the epitome of the democratic body politic. The Bawdy Politicuniquely extends that analysis into legal records like the Middlesex Sessions Papers and the Bridewell Courtbooks, in order to examine the ways prevailing assumptions about prostitutes, or “common women” as they were known, affected the patterns of arrest, arraignment, and punishment.

'This deeply learned, clearly-written book examines the cultural function of political pornography by exploring how the bawd and the prostitute figure as the denigrated representatives of mass political participation in the period as well as how this figuration relates to what we can learn about historical women who were bawds and prostitutes. Mowry's distinctive focus and argument, and her careful grounding in original research, distinguish The Bawdy Politic from other scholarship on the topic. This book will contribute to our understanding of the histories of women, of sexuality, and of pornography, as well as of political rhetoric and its resources both in the past and today. The book will also make an important contribution to discussions about women's relationship to the emerging public sphere.' Frances E. Dolan, Professor of English, University of California-Davis

'This is a fascinating study of how the distopic vision of pornographic pamphlets and broadsides—particularly their representation of a monstrous bawdy politic governed by “common women”—provided fodder for anti-democratic politics of the late seventeenth century. Mowry’s sophisticated reading of political pornography in relation to legal discourses and practices contributes not only to a consideration of the gendered dimensions of liberalism and the public sphere, but to our understanding prostitution as a sexual identity.' Valerie Traub, Professor of English and Women’s Studies, University of Michigan

'Meticulously researched and richly detailed... Mowry widely consults and deftly engages with literary and historical scholarship on her subject, and her original research encompasses previously overlooked satires... A worthwhile read, The Bawdy Politic offers much to literary critics and historians interested in the politics and pornography of the late Stuart era. Learned, provocative and exhaustively detailed in its presentation of historical evidence, Mowry's study moves scholarship toward a balanced approach to the topic...' H-Net Review

Roxana, or the Fortunate Mistress (Broadview, 2004).

"Rare is that edition that gives us a fresh interpretation of a primary work, but that is precisely what Melissa Mowry has accomplished in this excellent edition. The introduction details Roxana's place in Defoe's career and the ways the novel evokes his Dissenter politics, while also shedding new light on the novel's imbrication in debates about political sovereignty, feminism, and prostitution. The supplementary materials are all artfully chosen to produce fresh readings of the novel. Finally, the inclusion of some of the alternate endings written for Roxana, along with a brief reception history of Defoe's work, invites speculation about changes in the representation of gender and sexuality over the course of the long eighteenth century in Britain." - Scarlet Bowen, University of Colorado

Currently, Dr. Mowry is at work on a project that stretches from the print culture of the English civil wars (1642-1649) through the publication of Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa: Ties that Bind: The Hermeneutics of Collectivity and the English Literary Imagination, 1642-1748. 

Links to Selected Articles

“Women, Work, and Rearguard Politics and Defoe’s Moll Flanders”  http://ecti.pennpress.org/PennPress/journals/ecti/sampleArticle1.pdf

“Feminism and Eighteenth-century Studies: Working in the Bordello of History” http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_eighteenth_century/v050/50.1.mowry.html

“Reopening the Question of Class Formation”

http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/eighteenth-century_studies/v043/43.4.mowry.html