Nationalism and Sexuality: Respectability and Abnormal Sexuality in Modern EuropeTraces the relationship between nationalist ideology and the normative manners, morals, and sexuality of modern Europe which emerged at the end of the 18th century. Discusses the view that "outsiders" - homosexual, insane, criminal, or Jewish - were abnormal, and the equation of racial degeneracy with sexual degeneracy. Some homosexuals, wishing to prove their masculinity, attacked Jews and embraced racism. In Weimar Germany, sexual decadence was blamed on the Jews. Ch. 7 (pp. 133-152) deals with the relationship between sexuality and antisemitism in Germany and in Nazi thought. |
Contents
Nationalism and Respectability I | 1 |
Manliness and Homosexuality | 23 |
The Rediscovery of the Human Body | 48 |
Copyright | |
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Nationalism and Sexuality: Respectability and Abnormal Sexuality in Modern ... George Lachmann Mosse No preview available - 1985 |
Common terms and phrases
androgyne attitudes beauty became Berlin Bloch bourgeois society camaraderie Chapter Christian criminal death decadence deutschen Edward Carpenter England English erotic example exemplified fascism female feminine fin de siècle Flex France Friedrich friends German Youth Movement girl Greek Himmler Hitler homo homoerotic homoeroticism Homosexualität homosexuals human body Ibid ideal of manliness immutable important Iwan Bloch Jewish Jews Krafft-Ebing Leipzig lesbians life-reform London Magnus Hirschfeld male friendships Männerbund manners and morals Marianne masculinity masturbation middle classes modern Montherlant Mosse myth National Socialism national stereotype national symbol nationalism and respectability nature Nazi nineteenth century normal and abnormal norms nude nudist nudity Oscar Wilde outsider Paris passions Pietism political popular Psychopathia sexualis purity Queen Luise racism rediscovery role Rupert Brooke sculpture sensuousness so-called soldiers Stefan George Stuttgart tability Third Reich thought tion tional tradition transcend vice virility virtue wars of liberation woman women wrote Wurche York