"Do not...do anything that you cannot unblushingly tell your mother": Gender and Social Purity in Canada
Authors
Sharon Cook
Abstract
Social Purity was a multi-faceted campaign championing such causes as dress and
dietary reform, temperance, abolition of the ‘‘white slave trade’’, adoption of ‘‘a
white life for two’’, censorship of much of popular culture, and sex education for
young women and men. Recent analyses of Social Purity underline the importance
of social control as a motive. However, much Social Purity literature had an
evangelical basis; the gender and religiosity of the writers and audience are important
factors in understanding the impetus and message of Social Purity in Canada
during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.