Imagining Prostitution in Modern Japan, 1850–1913 is a timely reminder that gender as an analytic tool provides new perspectives to even the "oldest profession." Intelligent, refreshing, and clearly written, Davis investigates how the historicity of the gender specific category “prostitute” changes during a period of rapid social change in Japan. By focusing on the diverse and competing modes of representing prostitution in the Meiji period, Davis brilliantly reveals how politics, race, class, and gender are interconnected.