George Ryley Scott, The History of Prostitution (Senate, 1968)
Scott was certainly on the right track with his study of the prostitute, but unfortunately, he went quite wrong in a number of places and undercut his thesis. Scott, it seems, was trying to present a clearheaded call for the re-evaluation of the attitude towards prostitution in America and Britain, with the ultimate goal of legalization and regulation. In doing so, he covered the historical changes in attitudes towards prostitution, its reasons for existence, various results of its outlawing at various times, etc. Overall, his argument is clearheaded and lucid, and his heart is certainly in the right place; all the arguments he makes for the legalization of prostitution are solid ones, and most have been discussed into the ground by reasonable non-sex-obsessed people for decades. Where Scott goes wrong every time is in his citations. Some of his citations are worthwhile, from official reports and the like. However, the rest of them are from supposedly-eyewitness works like Slaves to Sin: The Trade in Women's Flesh and Walter: My Secret Life, the very titles of which lead to speculation about how much of the stuff Scott is citing as fact was exaggeration in the first place, and how much of it deserved much, much closer scrutiny before being used as the basis for an argument. The use of such sources here is likely to lend the finders of prurience in everything they see all the ammunition necessary to deride Scott's whole work as unreliable. And, in truth, such a position probably has legs. Scott ended up doing more to defeat his cause than to defend it. Which is unfortunate, because it's a righteous cause with far too few defenders. ** ½