Frauds Exposed: Or How the People Are Deceived and Robbed and Youth Corrupted

About The Book

The New York Society for the Suppression of Vice sounds like the satirical invention of a modern wag but it was a very real organization dedicated to policing public morality in the late 19th century. Its founder Anthony Comstock was notorious as a crusader for decency and a strident advocate of censorship-so strident in fact that George Bernard Shaw coined the term comstockery to refer to his zeal for the cause. (Shaw was one of Comstocks victims; so were Theodore Dreiser and D.H. Lawrence.) Here in this rare 1880 work hard to find today in an elegant edition Comstock obsessively details the results of his work as a special agent in the New York post office which granted him the power to inspect the mail determine what was obscene and harass the senders with the full power of the law behind him. A relic of American Victorian-era prudery this makes for wickedly amusing reading today. American author ANTHONY COMSTOCK (1844-1915) also wrote Gambling Outrages (1887) and Morals Versus Art (1888).
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