|
|
|
"To Popularize the Nude in Art":
Comstockery Reconsidered
Alyssa Picard
University of Michigan
|
Of all the figures in the struggle
over turn-of-the-century vice reform, Anthony Comstock is perhaps
the last one might expect to encounter immortalized in the nude.
He acquired his fame as a censor of nudity, among other offenses:
from 1873 to his death in 1915, Assistant United States Postmaster
Comstock lent his name and his enthusiasm for law enforcement
to the prosecution of the "Comstock Laws," the eponymous statutes
which restricted the dissemination of vicious images and information
through the United States mail. In his government post and as
the head of New York City's private Society for the Suppression
of Vice, Comstock prosecuted quack physicians, abortionists, lottery
runners, purveyors of lewd literature and art, free love advocates
and physical culture devotees. By the end of his career, he had
arrested more than 3,700 people and burned over fifty tons of
obscene books, 3,984,063 obscene pictures, and 16,900 photographic
plates.1
|
1
|
|
Historians have imagined Comstock
as an exemplar of the repressive Victorian sensibilities about sex
that have long been associated with the turn of the century. And
it is for this reason, among others, that we would be surprised
to find him warily sketching a female nude, then posing in the buff
for a group of male art students. Yet this is precisely as he exists
in a 1906 political cartoon satirizing his raid on the New York
Art Students' League, during which he confiscated that year's student-produced
art catalog. The image is a mockery, but it is perhaps a richer
historical source than a photograph of Comstock unclothed ever could
be, for it reflects not only an undocumented legacy of creative
resistance to Comstock's censorship, but also the multiple, contradictory
facets of the reform program contemporaries saw buried in layers
of flesh and bombast. |
2
|
|
Comstock's campaigns, which attacked
lotteries and gambling as well as abortion and obscene literature,
can hardly be dismissed as being simply anti-sex. But a more recent
interpretationÑthat Comstock's popularity reflects contemporary
fear of immigrant penetration of the urban middle class2Ñdoes not unpack the multiple meanings
of Comstock's work, or account for his longstanding popularity with
even working-class New Yorkers. Using Comstock's published writings,
sympathetic and unsympathetic newspaper accounts about him, and
the commentary produced by various targets of his censorship campaigns,
this essay explores Comstock's attempts to restrict the circulation
of representations through New York communities. In so doing, it
suggests the limitations of the "public/private" binary that has
been used by historians of sexuality and vice reform to understand
the moral geography of turn-of-the-century America. It produces
new evidence suggesting that Comstock's interest in censorship cannot
be explained by his desire to maintain a rigid distinction between
public and private: he was suspicious of private behavior as well
as public, and both feared and relied upon publicity for the success
of his vice reform campaign. |
. . . |
There are about 12672 more words in this article.
Please log in (or, if you are not yet an
authorized user, please go to the
User Setup page) to gain full access rights. Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.
|