Sexology in Culture: Labelling Bodies and Desires

Front Cover
Lucy Bland, Laura Doan
University of Chicago Press, 1998 - Psychology - 236 pages
The key founders of sexology, the "science of desire," were Havelock Ellis, Richard von Krafft-Ebing, and Magnus Hirschfeld. This volume examines the impact of their writings on English-speaking culture from the 1880s to the early 1940s. How influential a field was sexology during this period, and how much power did sexologists wield? What was the impact of their work on popular and official attitudes to sex?

Lucy Bland and Laura Doan have brought together leading historians of sex, cultural and literary critics, and scholars in gay, lesbian, and queer studies, to reassess current debates on sexology in light of its history. They address issues such as the relation of "sexual science" to the law, government policy, journalism, eugenics programs, marriage and sex manuals, and literary representation. They also map out new readings of transsexuality and bisexuality, and the centrality of race within sexology.

Sexology in Culture and its companion Sexology Uncensored will interest all those concerned with understanding modern sexual discourse in its historical context.

 

Contents

Subjects Categories and Cures
11
Interpretations
27
Eugenics
44
Scientific Racism and the Invention of the Homosexual
60
Sexual Inversion
79
The Tattooed Prostitute
100
Inversion and
116
Feminist Reconfigurations of Heterosexuality in
135
Suzanne Raitt
150
Maud Allan Salome and the Cult
183
Sexologys Intervention
199
Feminism Science and the Radical
214
Index
231
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About the author (1998)

Laura Doan is professor of cultural history and sexuality studies at the University of Manchester. She is the author of Fashioning Sapphism: The Origins of a Modern English Lesbian Culture and editor of Sexology in Culture: Labeling Bodies and Desires, among other books.

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