'Women of easy virtue and thoroughly filthy fellows, ageing roues and problem girls, harlots in cars and perfect poppets: Gillian Swanson provides a dazzling gallery of the sexualised figures who inhabited the urban landscape of an emergent modern Britain. She combines a breathtaking story, full of drama and pathos, with sharp-eyed analytical interpretation. With compelling audacity she places the sexualised pathologies of twentieth-century Britain at the very heart of our understanding of how modern life works. Swanson delivers an incomparable, wry backward glance at the disorderly nation, her own sympathies evident on every page.' - Bill Schwarz, Queen Mary, University of London, UK'The detailed descriptions of historically grounded psychological, policy and social management perspectives, the disciplines that sought to define deviance in the landscape of post-war Britain, offer much to researchers of transgressive urban cultures.' - Urban Studies