WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Criminality and economic conditions cover

Criminality and economic conditions

Chapter 130: Paris.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The work surveys historical and contemporary writings on the relation between economic circumstances and criminal behavior, reviewing precursors, moral statisticians, the Italian and French criminological schools, bio-socialist and spiritualist perspectives, and socialist analyses. It evaluates statistical studies and theoretical claims about property, prices, industrialization, and social movements, compares competing methodologies, and highlights complexities and contested findings in linking poverty and prosperity to crime rates. The author synthesizes criticisms and evidence to offer a cautious, empirically minded conclusion about the multifaceted influence of economic conditions on criminality.

By prostitution must be understood the social fact that there are women who sell their bodies for the exercise of sexual acts, and make a profession of it. The putting of one’s body at the disposal of another for the purpose of sexual intercourse constitutes then at times the sale of merchandise. To find the cause of prostitution in our present society it is necessary to begin by asking: “What are the causes for the demand for this merchandise?” These causes may be reduced to the following:

a. The difficulty or impossibility of marrying found by many men. We have already seen that in our present society there is a continually increasing number of the petty bourgeois and of those who practice the liberal professions who, in consequence of the insufficiency of their incomes, cannot marry, or only at a rather advanced age. As we have seen, also, this is not in general the case with the proletariat. They reach the maximum of their wages while still quite young, and are less exacting as regards their material needs. All this brings it about that they marry sooner and so have less recourse to prostitution. (Soldiers and seamen, who are often forced to remain unmarried, form an exception.)

b. Besides those of whom I have been speaking, those also must be mentioned who do not wish to attach themselves for life to a single woman. Further, separate education, inducing a different life for the two sexes, is often an obstacle to the easy meeting of two persons [322]who might make a marriage of inclination. Many men renounce marriage because the intellectual plane of women is altogether different from theirs, as a consequence both of their education and of their manner of life, and also because with them the thought of improving their economic position by marriage predominates.85

The larger contingent of men who have recourse to prostitutes is made up of bachelors,86 and the smaller of married men. Whence springs the following cause:

c. Often the marriage is not contracted from inclination, but for financial reasons, which brings it about that the men often indemnify themselves with prostitutes. But this is applicable also to those cases where the marriage has not been made for the reasons named, but in which, for any cause, an antipathy has sprung up between the couple, without the dissolution of the marriage, either because of the difficulty of securing a divorce, or from motives of expediency. Since monogamy does not proceed from an innate inclination, prostitution is a necessary correlative of marriage.

d. The keeping of extravagant mistresses is a pastime for those who have been demoralized by a life of luxury and ease, and at the same time is a means by which these people can get rid of their incomes.

e. Finally, prostitution is a means whereby rich perverts satisfy their inclinations.

Before leaving the causes of the demand for prostitutes there is one further matter to consider. Those who have recourse to prostitutes must necessarily have a low opinion of woman, whom they consider only as an object existing for pleasure, and thus bound to be ready, as soon as a man wishes, to furnish him what he desires, for money, and not because of affection. This vile fashion of regarding women has been universal for centuries, and is still pretty general. It is to be explained from the long-continued inferior social position of women. We have seen that this position has been improved little by little, and that the result of this improvement has been an increase in the [323]number of men who have a higher opinion of woman, and who wish to have sexual relations with a woman only when there is a mutual affection between them. These persons form even today only a small minority, however.

In the presence of a majority still thinking quite differently it is absurd to preach total sexual abstinence to all unmarried young men, as certain moralists do (Tolstoi, for example). Though there are men who abstain without injury to their health, these moralists forget that the satisfaction of the sexual desires is one of the most important needs of the majority of men (the life of our day certainly increases these desires), and that present social conditions are the cause of men’s considering woman their inferior. Dr. Blaschko, in his work “Die Prostitution im XIX Jahrhundert”, rightly says: “The sexual requirement in the case of mankind as of all other beings is an entirely natural one. To be sure, it is not so strong and compelling as the necessity of food and drink; it can be suppressed in the case of anyone for a time, and with many permanently, without injury to the health. But what is true of this or that person does not hold for the mass of mankind, for whom sexual intercourse is doubtless a necessity.”87

It is now necessary to inquire why there is a sufficient supply to meet this demand. Before beginning, however, one remark must be made. The point of departure of the etiology of prostitution must be the incontestable fact that modesty is not an innate but an acquired quality. The problem is chiefly, then, what are the causes why the feeling of modesty is not sufficiently developed among certain women. The following are the principal causes:

a. Immoral environment. We shall examine this first in so far as it affects children.88 In running over the statistics which mention the age of prostitutes one is particularly struck by the fact that a great number of them are still very young. To cite some examples: Dr. G. Richelot gives the following figures in his work “La Prostitution en Angleterre”:89 [324]

London, 1836–1854.

Prostitutes Sentenced in Cases of Summary Jurisdiction.

Age. To the 10,000.
From 10 to 15 years 27
From,, 15 to,, 20 years,, 2,463
From,, 20 to,, 25 years,, 3,623
25 and over 3,887

Edinburgh, 1835–1842.

Prostitutes Admitted to “Lock Hospital.”

Age. To the 1,000.
Below 15 42
From 15 to 20 662
From,, 20 to,, 25 199
25 and over 97

In the “Reports from the Select Committee of the House of Lords on the Law Relating to the Protection of Young Girls”90 the following figures may be found:

England, 1881–1882.

Received into an “Asylum for Girls and Women.”

Age. Number. Percentage.
12 to 14 8 55
14 to,, 16 6
16 to,, 18 28
18 to,, 20 34
20 to,, 23 9 45
23 to,, 25 25
25 to,, 39 27
137 100

In his work “De la Prostitution dans la ville de Paris” Parent-Duchatelet gives the following figures:91 [325]

Paris, 1831.

Registered Prostitutes.

Age. Number. Percentage.
12 years 1 23.6
13 years,, 3
14 years,, 8
15 years,, 17
16 years,, 44
17 years,, 55
18 years,, 101
19 years,, 115
20 years,, 216
21 years,, 204
22 years,, 249 76.4
23 years,, 240
24 years,, 207
25 years,, 193
26 and over 1,582
3,235 100.0

C. J. Lecour gives the following table:92

Paris, 1855–1869.

Registered Prostitutes.

Age. Number. Percentage.
Below 18 years 513 8
From 18 to 21 1,704 26.6
Over 21 4,190 65.4
6,407 100.0

Dr. Augagneur gives the following ages for prostitutes admitted to the hospital:93

Lyons.

Years. Older Girls. Younger Girls. Total.
1877 520 (65.5%) 274 (34.0%) 794
1887 144 (68.2%) 67 (31.8%) 211
664 (66.07%) 341 (33.73%) 1,005

[326]

S. Sighele gives the following figures:94

Italy.

Registered Prostitutes.

1875 From 16 to 20 2,455 26.98
From,, 21 to,, 30 4,766 52.50
31 and over 1,867 20.52
9,088 100.00
1881 From 17 to 20 2,953 31.90
From,, 21 to,, 30 5,456 58.92
31 and over 850 9.18
9,259 100.00
1885 Under 20 3,228 27.76
From 20 to 30 4,589 54.70
31 and over 1,471 17.54
8,388 100.00

Dr. L. Fiaux gives the result of an official enquiry, as follows:95

Russia, 1889.

Out of a Total of 17,603 Prostitutes.

Age. Percentage.
15 and under 0.3 69.9
From 15 to 16 1.3
From,, 16 to,, 17 3.5
From,, 17 to,, 18 6.9
From,, 18 to,, 19 8.8
From,, 19 to,, 20 10.8
From,, 20 to,, 25 38.3
25 and over 30.1 30.1
100.0 100.0

Dr. A. Baumgarten gives the following figures:96 [327]

Vienna.

Prostitutes Not Registered.

Age. Number to the 1,000.
13 4
14 19
16 94
17 97
18 111
19 119
20 83
527

As these figures show, there is a considerable portion of the prostitutes who are minors, but they do not tell us of the number of adults who embraced the profession while they were yet under age. As to this point, Dr. Bonhoeffer gives the following, showing the age at which the prostitutes whom he examined began the practice of their profession:97

Breslau.

16 years old or under 30 54%
Between 17 and 18 years 44
Between,, 19 and,, 20 years,, 28
Between,, 21 and,, 50 years,, 88 46%
190 100%

Parent-Duchatelet gives the following table:98

Paris.

Age at the Time
of Registration.
Number. Percentage.
10 2 50.4
11 3
12 3
13 6
14 20
15 51
16 111
17 149
18 279
19 322
20 389
21 303
Over 21 years 1,610 49.6
3,248 100.0

[328]

Dr. Fiaux gives the following figures:99

Russia.

Age at the Time
of Registration.
Percentage.
11 or younger 1.2 80.5
13 to 15 9.0
15 to,, 16 12.9
16 to,, 18 30.8
18 to,, 21 26.6
21 and over 19.5 19.5
100.0 100.0

A large majority of prostitutes, then, have been placed upon the registers of the police while still under age. We may very well say, moreover, without fear of mistake, that a great part of those who are registered at a later period of life have already been among the clandestine prostitutes. Dr. Augagneur says: “How many of these women, devoted indefinitely to the life of a common prostitute, would not have fled all its horrors if a society, careless of the interests of its members, had furnished them with sufficient means of defense up to the age at which they all have succumbed,—under 21 years? When a woman has not prostituted herself before 21, she will not prostitute herself later. Look for exceptions to this rule and you will find that they are very few. The woman who is older and more experienced knows the consequences of her acts; less passionate, less weak, and less impressionable, she resists better a first temptation whose consequences she is fully aware of.100

However this may be, it is certain that a very great proportion of the prostitutes have taken up their profession, or have been seduced, while they were still very young. Upon this latter point the following figures enlighten us:101 [329]

England.

Age at which Prostitutes
Were Seduced.
Number.
11 3 58%
12 5
13 16
14 79
15 189
16 184
17 247
18 221
19 297
20 280
21 256
22 and over 1,299 42%
3,076 100%

In his work, “La prostitution clandestine”, Dr. L. Martineau informs us that the age at which the prostitutes whom he observed were deflowered is distributed as follows:102

France.

Age. Number.
5 1
9 2
10 2
11 2
12 5
13 11
14 31
15 86
16 87
17 115
18 93
19 50
20 37
21 27
549
90% of a total of 607.

The facts already brought out give rise to the presumption that the ranks of prostitutes are in a very large measure recruited from the less well-to-do classes, where the neglect of children has assumed enormous proportions, and not from the more favored classes where the children are carefully guarded and kept away from unfavorable influences. The correctness of this conclusion is shown by a further examination. According to figures given in the “Reports” quoted above, only 44 out of 3,076 prostitutes, or 1.4%, came from the well-to-do [330]classes.103 In his “Sozialpolitisches Handbuch” Dr. Lux publishes the following table:104

Berlin, 1871–1878.

Profession of the Parents of Prostitutes. Numbers. Percentage.
Artisans 1,015 48
Factory hands 467 22
Lower officials 305 14
Commerce and transportation 222 11
Agriculture, etc. 87 4
Soldiers 26 1
2,122 100

Dr. Bonhoeffer found that the fathers of the prostitutes whom he examined practiced the following professions:105

Breslau.

Manufacture and trades 72 42
Unskilled workmen 32 19
Lower officials 24 14
Commerce 13 8
Transportation 12 7
Lodginghouse-keepers 6 3 .5
Agriculture 8 5
Traveling musicians 2 1
Higher officials 1 0 .5
170 100 .0

Dr. Fiaux gives the following figures:106

Russia.

Classes from Which Prostitutes Are Recruited. Percentage.
Peasants 47.5
Bourgeois 36.3
Wives and daughters of soldiers 7.2
Other classes 4.7
Foreign subjects 1.5
Nobles and daughters of employes 1.8
Merchants and considerable citizens .5
Daughters of members of the clergy .5
100.0

[331]

As the table given above shows, the Russian prostitutes are recruited in greater numbers from the bourgeoisie than in the other countries of Europe. The Russian bourgeoisie, however, cannot be compared with that of other countries. It is more like the petty bourgeoisie, as the following quotation given by Dr. Fiaux proves: “The committee considers that the great mass of the women registered belong to the lower classes.” The fact that, of 100 prostitutes, 83 come from poor families, 16 from well-to-do families, and one from a rich family, proves the same thing.

After having given the professions of 3,332 fathers of prostitutes,107 Parent-Duchatelet arrives at the following conclusion: … “prostitutes born in Paris all proceed from the artisan class, and … it is not true, as some persons have assured me, that there are to be found among them a number belonging to very distinguished families; …”108

In speaking of the prostitutes born outside of Paris he says: “… there is a mass of facts more than sufficient to prove to us that, as far as the class of society from which prostitutes come is concerned, the departments do not differ in any way from Paris; we see upon the last table as upon the first, only working people and those little favored by fortune, who consequently cannot take care of the education of their daughters, nor watch them, and still less provide for their needs when they have reached a certain age, …”109

We must particularize these unfavorable environmental influences. And the first fact that we meet is that a part of the young prostitutes have been incited to the profession by their parents. Parent-Duchatelet mentions 16 cases in which mother and daughter were both registered prostitutes110; and von Oettingen quotes the following from Dr. Tait:111 [332]

Edinburgh.

There were found among the prostitutes: