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A review by jhbandcats
The Five: The Lives of Jack the Ripper's Women by Hallie Rubenhold
challenging
dark
emotional
informative
sad
medium-paced
5.0
What a tragic and depressing, albeit illuminating, book about the horrors of poverty in the late 19th C. We’ve all been told that Jack the Ripper killed prostitutes. This study shows how these morally superior judgments have come to inform everything we know about the case.
The author focuses on the women, only referring to Jack the Ripper as their murderer. She has done extensive research to find out who these women were and what their lives were like, such that they ended up dead in the gutter. All these women came from working class families but because they were born female, the deck was stacked against them. The smallest setback could literally ruin someone’s life.
By viewing these women with compassion instead of condemnation, we can see who they really were.
The author focuses on the women, only referring to Jack the Ripper as their murderer. She has done extensive research to find out who these women were and what their lives were like, such that they ended up dead in the gutter. All these women came from working class families but because they were born female, the deck was stacked against them. The smallest setback could literally ruin someone’s life.
By viewing these women with compassion instead of condemnation, we can see who they really were.
Graphic: Alcoholism, Child death, Chronic illness, Domestic abuse, Infidelity, Misogyny, Sexual assault, Trafficking, Grief, Death of parent, Murder, Pregnancy, Abandonment, and Classism