The United States in the 1920s and 1930s witnessed dramatic
shifts in legal and popular attitudes toward sexuality and
obscenity. Female antiobscenity reformers were at the crux of these
transformations--simultaneously holding back some changes and urging
others forward. This article examines the antiobscenity work of
Catheryne Cooke Gilman and the organization over which she presided,
the Minneapolis, Minnesota, Women's Cooperative Alliance (WCA). It uses
Gilman's fluctuating alliances with sex educator Mary Ware Dennett
and social purity reformer Reverend William Sheafe Chase to demonstrate
how, why, and to what effect the WCA used explicit sex education as a tool
for divesting obscene amusements of their allure. Among other things,
the author concludes that the WCA inadvertently helped liberate the
commercial forms of sexual expression it fought against. By extending
protection to graphic educational information, even while continuing
to suppress sexually explicit commercial material, Gilman and the WCA
helped to dismantle existing obscenity law in ways that fueled the growing
free speech movement and eventually undermined the law's usefulness for
fighting obscenity.
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