truepenny: artist's rendering of Sidneyia inexpectans (ws: hamlet)
Sarah/Katherine ([personal profile] truepenny) wrote2010-06-01 01:51 pm

UBC: The Mysterious Death of Mary Rogers

Srebnick, Amy Gilman. The Mysterious Death of Mary Rogers: Sex and Culture in Nineteenth-Century New York. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.



I am disappointed in this book, and disappointed on several levels.

To start with, I am disappointed with Oxford University Press, which should damn well be able to copy-edit better than this. There are mistakes scattered throughout the text that a good copy-editor should catch: missing or incorrect apostrophes; using "criteria" as the singular; a sentence that says, "At the end of Lilla . . . the evil merchant undone, she [Lilla] dies" (155), when it is in fact important to Srebnick's argument that she survives (and the sentence after next begins "The survival of Lilla notwithstanding"); misuse of the word "quixotic": "Determining crime rates, especially for the early part of the nineteenth century, is a task fraught with difficulty, both because of the lack of consistent and reliable data and because of the quixotic meaning of those numbers that are available" (94). I'm not sure what word she does mean ("ambiguous," maybe?), but "quixotic" ain't it.

Secondly, I am disappointed in Srebnick as a historian. She treats her own speculations about Mary Rogers' genealogy as if they were analyzable facts on which to build an argument, and throughout the book, she does a poor job of distinguishing what in the historical record can be relied on as factual, what must be treated carefully as hypothesis, and what must be regarded as fiction.

And thirdly, I am disappointed in Srebnick as a writer. She has what [livejournal.com profile] matociquala calls line of direction problems (it's very obvious that she was unfamiliar with mystery fiction before she started researching on this topic, because she has no sense of how to organize her facts), she is not good at analyzing literary texts (most historians aren't, so this isn't surprising, but it's still disappointing), and she's over-theorized--which I say not merely because I have very little patience with theory, particularly in the Foucauldian-Derridean vein, but because her theory and her buzzwords have greater prominence in her argument than her ostensible subject, and frequently seem to me to be doing nothing but obscuring the fact that she doesn't have very much of an argument at all.

And all of this is a great pity, because the subject of this book is potentially fascinating. Mary Rogers is the real person behind Poe's roman à clef, "The Mystery of Marie Roget." She was a "cigar girl" (a young woman employed behind a cigar counter--which, in the 1840s was borderline scandalous and attracted both custom and a certain amount of notoriety to the shop) who disappeared one Sunday in July 1841 and was found three days later floating in the Hudson River, raped, battered, and strangled. The crime was, and remains, unsolved, although there are a number of theories and plausible scenarios. Some months after Mary's death, an innkeeper in New Jersey, near where the body was found, made a confession that Mary died as the result of an abortion performed in the inn, and what most deeply irritates me about The Mysterious Death of Mary Rogers is that throughout the book, Srebnick treats this confession as if it were truthful despite the fact that she herself admits it may have been self-serving and despite the fact that it contradicts the published report of the coroner on Mary Rogers' body. And Srebnick never explains the contradictions. It is true that the aftereffects of a botched abortion might look like rape, but that does not explain why Mary Rogers was strangled. If Srebnick's theory is that she wasn't strangled, but died of the abortion, she needs to explain the very specific and vivid evidence presented in the newspaper reports of strangulation (especially since she spends a lot of time talking about the vivid newspaper descriptions of Mary's corpse as proof of the exploitation and degradation of female victims of violence); if the theory is that she was strangled, either she didn't die in the abortion but was murdered for some other reason, in which case Srebnick needs to stop treating the abortion theory as if it were the truth, or the abortionist also strangled her, in which case Srebnick seriously needs to explain (a.) how it was that she wasn't already dead or dying and (b.) why the abortionist felt it necessary to strangle her. To keep her from going to the police? Given the information about the police in New York in 1841, that doesn't seem likely to me, so if it's the case, I really need to have that laid out clearly. And if what's important to Srebnick is not what really happened to the real woman, Mary Cecilia Rogers, but only the stories that were constructed in the popular press, then she needs to make that clear, too, and to quit paying lip service to the idea that her book is about the real woman's real death.

But Srebnick wants Mary to have died of an abortion because that fits in with the buzzword theories about women's sexuality and "urban culture" (a phrase she uses constantly without ever clearly defining or acknowledging that "urban culture" in New York was not the same as "urban culture" in other cities, even other American cities) she's used to construct the book about, just as she wants Mary to have descended from the Rogers and Mather families (yes, those Mathers) because it makes Mary an example of the economic degradation and vulnerability of women in the mid-nineteenth century that is kind of the thing Srebnick really wants to write a book about.

I really wanted to like and be fascinated by this book, and I'm sad that neither happened.

[identity profile] fidelioscabinet.livejournal.com 2010-06-02 12:36 am (UTC)(link)
Stashower gives a fairly good rundown on the public attitude towards the employment of young women in jobs dealing with the public, especially in positions where that public was typically all-male. The rationale behind hiring them was that their physical attractiveness would bring in customers, so they were on display in a way the prevailing morality of that era found highly questionable, even if they were fairly-well protected from actual sexual exploitation.

"Parasexual" is a useful term--there's a distinct niche that it fills.
g33kgrrl: (Default)

[personal profile] g33kgrrl 2010-06-02 01:42 am (UTC)(link)
Ooh, much like stewardesses and the arguments that airlines made when they were being forced to have men be flight attendants. That's a very useful term indeed.

(I don't know the history very well, but just read an article that discussed it briefly, so if I'm wrong on that someone please correct me.)
ext_6283: Brush the wandering hedgehog by the fire (Default)

[identity profile] oursin.livejournal.com 2010-06-02 12:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it's in Zola's novel about a Parisian department store (?Au Bonheur des Dames??) that he mentions that the shopgirls were underpaid on the grounds that they had the opportunity to meet men of a higher social class and become their petite amies. Or it might be in a relatively recent historical study on women, shopping and the rise of the department store during the C19th, the title and author of which at the moment completely elude me.

[identity profile] fidelioscabinet.livejournal.com 2010-06-03 11:20 pm (UTC)(link)
It's important to keep in mind the prevailing attitudes of the time as well. Exposure to the general public gaze was supposed to be an intrusive hardship respectable women should be spared, through the protective care of their family members. Married women were to be protected by their husbands, who should no better than to bring inaapropriate visitors into the family circle, and to a lesser extent by other (mostly male, and also older female) family members--in-laws and blood relatives both. Unmarried ones were to be protected by parents or parent-surrogates, as well as their brothers and older female relatives.

Availability to the public gaze and to indiscriminate public contact was felt to signal sexual availability to some extent. A respectable female should not be subjected to "insult", but confusion as to her respectability could result from inappropriate public exposure--partly being seen in situations which might lead people (mostly male) to misundestand her availability, but also as the result of failing to show the proper degree of reserve in neutral situations--etiquette books of the era emphasize this is discussing how women should behave when in company. Stashower notes that John Anderson, Mary Rogers's employer, had to carefully promise her mother that not only would the girl never be left alone in the store (which appears to have sold newspapers, magazines, and books as well as tobacco products--it was a big hangout for literary New York), but that she would be escorted to and from work--he was expected to behave as a surrogate male family member to a certain extent.


[identity profile] fidelioscabinet.livejournal.com 2010-06-03 11:21 pm (UTC)(link)
I recall somthing like this in Otto Friedrich's Olympia: Paris in the Age of Manet, although it may not be the book you're thinking of.