The Library Illustrative of Social Progress was a series of pornographic books published by John Camden Hotten around 1872 (falsely dated 1777). They were mainly reprints of eighteenth-century pornographic works on flagellation. Hotten claimed to have found them in the library of Henry Thomas Buckle (1821โ1862) but Henry Spencer Ashbee counterclaimed that they were in fact from his collection.[1][2]
^Crawford, Katherine (2007). European sexualities, 1400-1800. New approaches to European history. Vol. 38. Cambridge University Press. p. 223. ISBN978-0-521-83958-7.
^ abcdPrins, Yopie (1999). Victorian Sappho. Princeton University Press. p. 152. ISBN0-691-05919-5.
^Greenspan, Ezra; Rose, Jonathan (2000). Book History, Volume 3. Penn State Press. p. 70. ISBN0-271-02050-4.
^Fowler, Patsy; Jackson, Alan (2003). Launching Fanny Hill: essays on the novel and its influences. AMS studies in the eighteenth century. Vol. 41. AMS Press. p. 169. ISBN0-404-63541-5.
^Binhammer, Katherine (2003). "The "Singular Propensity" of Sensibility's Extremities: Female Same-Sex Desire and the Eroticization of Pain in Late-Eighteenth-Century British Culture". GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 9: 471โ498. doi:10.1215/10642684-9-4-471. S2CID144739362.
Ashbee, Henry Spencer (1877). Index Librorum Prohibitorum: being Notes Bio- Biblio- Icono- graphical and Critical, on Curious and Uncommon Books. London: privately printed.