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1.
Ann Chir Plast Esthet ; 69(5): 338-342, 2024 Sep.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39097423

ABSTRACT

Magnus Hirschfeld was a brilliant German doctor campaigning for the decriminalization and destigmatization of homosexuality. During the very liberal Weimar Republic (1918-1933) he published his avant-garde articles, he created his Institute of Sexual Sciences (Institut für Sexualwissenschaft), where the first published transgender surgery took place, performed on Dora Richter in 1931 (we will be interested in this first report of successful intervention) and multiplied the interventions to abolish paragraph 175, penalizing "sodomy". Ultimately the rise of Nazism forced him to flee his country and end his life in France. Hirschfeld's work remained unfinished. His political activism and his over-media coverage earned him numerous criticisms even within the gay and lesbian movement of the time. Who was this strange doctor (the Einstein of sex, as an American promoter presented him during his conferences in 1930) who combined the faults, for the time, of being at the same time Jewish, homosexual and leftist?


Subject(s)
Sex Reassignment Surgery , History, 20th Century , Sex Reassignment Surgery/history , Sex Reassignment Surgery/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Male , Berlin , Female , Sexology/history , Germany , National Socialism/history
2.
J Hist Biol ; 57(1): 89-112, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38446269

ABSTRACT

This study situates Henry Havelock Ellis's sexological research within the nineteenth-century evolutionary debates, especially the discussion over sexual selection's applicability to humanity. For example, Ellis's monograph on sexual behavior, Sexual Inversion (1897), treated inborn homosexuality as a natural variation of evolutionary mechanisms. This book was situated within a longer study of human sexuality in relation to evolutionary selection. His later works dealt even more directly with Charles Darwin's concept of selection, such as Sexual Selection in Man (1905). Through Sexual Selection in Man, Ellis asserted that sexual attraction stemmed from a physical cause rather than an innate aesthetic sense. I argue that Ellis's best-known historical publications, including his work on sexual inversion, were intended to intervene in the contemporary evolutionary debates. This analysis also identifies a specific point where evolutionary theory informed the foundation of sexology as a scientific discipline.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Sexology , History, 19th Century , Humans , Sexology/history , Sexual Selection , History, 20th Century , Male , Sexual Behavior/history , Female
3.
Urologe A ; 59(9): 1095-1106, 2020 Sep.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32803406

ABSTRACT

His contemporaries described Hermann Rohleder, a physician from Leipzig, as a pioneer of sexual medicine. His career led him from treating patients with venereal diseases to urology and sexology. Rohleder worked for the institutionalization of sexology in Germany, but his attempts to establish a professorship at the University of Leipzig remained unsuccessful. Rohleder's life and work illustrate how closely the disciplines of urology and sexology were connected in the early 20th century.


Subject(s)
Sexology/history , Urology/history , Venereology/history , Germany , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Sexual Behavior , Urologists
4.
Hist Psychiatry ; 31(3): 294-310, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32447989

ABSTRACT

This article explores the antagonism between Sigmund Freud and the German neurologist and sexologist Albert Moll. When Moll, in 1908, published a book about the sexuality of children, Freud, without any grounds, accused him of plagiarism. In fact, Moll had reason to suspect Freud of plagiarism since there are many parallels between Freud's Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie and Moll's Untersuchungen über die Libido sexualis. Freud had read this book carefully, but hardly paid tribute to Moll's innovative thinking about sexuality. A comparison between the two works casts doubt on Freud's claim that his work was a revolutionary breakthrough. Freud's course of action raises questions about his integrity. The article also critically addresses earlier evaluations of the clash.


Subject(s)
Dissent and Disputes/history , Interprofessional Relations , Plagiarism , Psychoanalysis/history , Sexology/history , Austria , Germany , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans
5.
Urol Int ; 104(7-8): 501-509, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32172253

ABSTRACT

This paper reviews the files in the archive of the Nobel Prize Committee for Physiology or Medicine on the Austrian physiologist and pioneering researcher in the emerging fields of urology and sexual medicine: Eugen Steinach (1861-1944). It reconstructs and analyzes why and by whom Steinach was nominated for the Nobel Prize between 1920 and 1938 and discusses the reasons why he never received the award, although the Nobel Committee judged him as prizeworthy. Steinach's Nobel nominee career is extraordinary - not only because of his strong support by renowned international nominators from different scientific and medical disciplines, but also because of the controversial discussions within the Nobel Committee on his achievements, colored by the debates in the international scientific community. The Nobel Prize story adds a new perspective on how contemporary international scholars evaluated Steinach's research on reproduction, "male-making" females, "female-making" males, homosexuality, and the concept of rejuvenation.


Subject(s)
Sexology/history , Art , Austria , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Medicine , Nobel Prize
6.
Hist Sci ; 58(3): 326-349, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31631715

ABSTRACT

The sexological research questionnaire, which became a central research tool in twentieth-century sexology, has a methodological-developmental history stretching back into mid-nineteenth century Germany. It was the product of a prolonged, disruptive encounter between sexual scientists constructing sexual case studies along with newly assertive homosexual men supplying self-penned sexual autobiographies. Homosexual autobiographies were intensely interesting to these men of science but lacked the brevity, structure, and discipline of a formal clinical case study. In the closing decades of the century, efforts to harness and regularize this self-penned material resulted in a series of methodological adaptations. By the turn of the century this process had resulted in the first use of a formal sexual research questionnaire.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality/history , Psychiatry/history , Sexology/history , Surveys and Questionnaires , Behavioral Research/history , Female , Germany , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Terminology as Topic
7.
Hist Psychol ; 23(1): 40-61, 2020 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31328938

ABSTRACT

This article challenges the widely held belief that early-20th-century England was one of the most sexually repressed countries in the Western world. Late Victorian physicians discussing sexual diseases and dysfunctions were granted immunity from prosecution if their publications were sold through a recognized medical publisher only to Members of the Medical, Legal and Clerical Professions. It was assumed that those same constraints applied to publications concerning the psychology of the sexual life (sexology). In 1908, Rebman Limited, a well-known medical publisher, advertised Eden Paul's (1908) translation of Iwan Bloch's The Sexual Life of Our Time (hereafter, "Sexual Life") without any restrictions. Although a magistrate ruled the book obscene, the U.K. Home Office allowed republication on condition that its sale was strictly limited. The Rebman case reveals how the U.K. Home Office tried to police the new science of sexology by limiting its circulation, not censoring its content. Despite these restrictions, Sexual Life circulated among lay readers, thereby inviting further research into how even "censored" material shaped debates on sexual, social, and political reform. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Government Regulation/history , Publications/history , Sexology/history , Books/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Publications/legislation & jurisprudence , Sexual Dysfunctions, Psychological/history , United Kingdom
8.
Med Hist ; 63(3): 330-351, 2019 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31208483

ABSTRACT

The Czech Republic holds one of the highest numbers of men labelled as sexual delinquents worldwide who have undergone the irreversible process of surgical castration - a policy that has elicited strong international criticism. Nevertheless, Czech sexology has not changed its attitude towards 'therapeutic castration', which remains widely accepted and practised. In this paper, we analyse the negotiation of expertise supporting castration and demonstrate how the changes in institutional matrices and networks of experts (Eyal 2013) have impacted the categorisation of patients and the methods of treatment. Our research shows the great importance of historical development that tied Czech sexology with the state. Indeed, Czech sexology has been profoundly institutionalised since the early 1970s. In accordance with the state politics of that era, officially named Normalisation, sexology focused on sexual deviants and began creating a treatment programme that included therapeutic castration. This practice, the aim of which is to protect society from sex offenders, has changed little since. We argue that it is the expert-state alliance that enables Czech sexologists to preserve the status quo in the treatment of sexual delinquents despite international pressure. Our research underscores the continuity in medical practice despite the regime change in 1989. With regard to previous scholarship on state-socialist Czechoslovakia, we argue that it was the medical mainstream that developed and sustained disciplining and punitive features.


Subject(s)
Orchiectomy/history , Paraphilic Disorders/history , Sex Offenses/history , Sexology/history , Czech Republic , Czechoslovakia , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Male , Orchiectomy/legislation & jurisprudence , Paraphilic Disorders/surgery , Paraphilic Disorders/therapy , Political Systems/history , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence
9.
Urologe A ; 57(9): 1103-1110, 2018 Sep.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30073370

ABSTRACT

In this contribution we describe the life and work of the Berlin physician Carl Posner (1854-1928). We present his central role as a member of the founding generation of urology, andrology, and academic sexology in Germany. His clinical work, research and publication illustrate the central role these new disciplines played in the urological field. Finally, we describe how Posner is remembered in the history of urology and sexology.


Subject(s)
Andrology/history , Sexology/history , Urology/history , Germany , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century
10.
J Sex Res ; 55(7): 815-816, 2018 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29583024
11.
Med Humanit ; 42(4): e20-e25, 2016 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27856514

ABSTRACT

This article considers the way in which ethical concerns about sex reassignment surgery and especially the research and clinical practice of the sexologist Dr John Money (1921-2006) is being negotiated in the 1960s and 1970s novels Myra Breckinridge and Myron by Gore Vidal and The Passion of New Eve by Angela Carter. Drawing on the theories of gender and embodiment developed by Money, the article reads the novels as a critical response and discursive interaction with emergent sexological concepts.


Subject(s)
Gender Identity , Literature, Modern , Medicine in Literature , Sex Reassignment Surgery/ethics , Sexology , Transgender Persons , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Literature, Modern/history , Male , Science , Sexology/history , Transgender Persons/history
12.
Cad Saude Publica ; 32(8): e00036215, 2016 Sep 05.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27598015

ABSTRACT

Based on Bourdieu's field theory, this article analyzes the emergence and institutionalization of sexology as a science and profession in Portugal, identifying relevant institutions, actors, and professional practices and discussing its relations and specificities. The analysis begins by contextualizing the emergence of modern Western sexology in order to comprehend the Portuguese case in the international sexology context. The second section describes the social, cultural, and institutional factors that have driven the professionalization of sexology. The third section describes the emergence of Portuguese sexology and its principal historical milestones, institutions, and actors. Finally, the article discusses some implications of this process for the role of sexology as a science and profession. The study reveals the dynamics of national and international processes in the field, in the transition from a holistic perspective of sexology to the hegemony of sexual medicine, and sheds light on its mechanisms of legitimation as a transdisciplinary science of sexuality, suggesting future perspectives.


Subject(s)
Sexology/organization & administration , Brazil , Europe , Family Planning Policy , Health Occupations/trends , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Medicalization , Portugal , Sexology/classification , Sexology/history , Sexology/trends , Sexual Behavior/history , United States
13.
Dynamis ; 36(1): 211-31, 9, 2016.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27363251

ABSTRACT

At the beginning of the 20th century, the noted Nobel prize-winning Portuguese neurologist Egas Moniz made an expert analysis on homosexuality in a marriage annulment case of major value as an example of the effective application of sexological knowledge of that period. Contemporary republican legislation established marriage annulment in medical terms and punished relations between persons of the same sex, or contra natura. In his report, Moniz attempted to interpret distinctive elements of the life of the subject using sexological categories, illustrating the interaction between these categories and the changing forms adopted by homosexuality (or homosexual people) of the time.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality/history , Marriage/psychology , Sexology/history , History, 20th Century , Humans
16.
Lancet ; 387(10023): 1048, 2016 Mar 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27025179
17.
Urologe A ; 55(2): 257-68, 2016 Feb.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26839117

ABSTRACT

The connections between urology and sexology are often not obvious today. At the end of the 19th century both specialties developed in parallel especially in Berlin and had a fruitful relationship. Urologic journals and books were an ideal forum for publication especially for sexologists.


Subject(s)
Periodicals as Topic/history , Publishing/history , Sexology/history , Urology/history , Berlin , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century
18.
Dynamis (Granada) ; 36(1): 211-231, 2016.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-151093

ABSTRACT

A principios del siglo XX, Egas Moniz, insigne neurólogo y Premio Nobel portugués, emitió un informe pericial sobre homosexualidad para un caso de anulación matrimonial que constituye un material de gran valor como ejemplo de aplicación efectiva del conocimiento sexológico disponible en la época. En este mismo periodo la flamante legislación republicana estableció la anulación del matrimonio contemplando causas de carácter médico y se tipificaron penalmente las relaciones entre personas del mismo sexo, o contra natura. En su informe, Egas Moniz interpretó desde las categorías sexológicas de la época distintos elementos de la vida del sujeto estudiado, ilustrando la interacción entre estas categorías y las formas cambiantes que adoptó la homosexualidad (o las personas homosexuales) de la época (AU)


At the beginning of the 20th century, the noted Nobel prize-winning Portuguese neurologist Egas Moniz made an expert analysis on homosexuality in a marriage annulment case of major value as an example of the effective application of sexological knowledge of that period. Contemporary republican legislation established marriage annulment in medical terms and punished relations between persons of the same sex, or contra natura. In his report, Moniz attempted to interpret distinctive elements of the life of the subject using sexological categories, illustrating the interaction between these categories and the changing forms adopted by homosexuality (or homosexual people) of the time (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Homosexuality/history , Marriage , Sexology/history , Sexology/instrumentation , Sexology/legislation & jurisprudence , Speech/physiology , Forensic Medicine/instrumentation , Forensic Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Forensic Medicine/methods , Forensic Psychiatry/history , Forensic Psychiatry/instrumentation , Forensic Psychiatry/methods , Nobel Prize , Portugal
19.
São Paulo; Instituto Paulista de Sexualidade; 2015. 309 p.
Monography in Portuguese | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-ISPROD, Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-ISACERVO | ID: biblio-1082989
20.
Rio de Janeiro; Editora Fiocruz; 2016. 234 p. ilus.(História e saúde; Clássicos e fontes).
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-983467

ABSTRACT

A sexualidade como função fisiológica e o desejo sexual como necessidade orgânica primária. A educação sexual – para homens e mulheres – como estratégia para solucionar não só o problema das doenças venéreas, mas outros como a desarmonia conjugal e as perversões sexuais. A legitimação e institucionalização da andrologia, a ciência do homem. A crítica à abstinência sexual socialmente imposta às mulheres solteiras e viúvas. Essas eram algumas das ideias defendidas pelo autoproclamado sexólogo e andrologista brasileiro José de Albuquerque, médico que, embora tenha enfrentado tabus, levantado polêmicas e causado rebuliço na elite carioca nos anos 1930, ficou esquecido ao longo das décadas seguintes. Mas agora esse importante personagem da história da sexualidade no Brasil volta à cena com a publicação de sua autobiografia até então inédita. Enfim, para além das peripécias de uma vida bastante agitada e de uma singular trajetória profissional, a autobiografia desvela aspectos interessantíssimos do desenvolvimento das ciências médicas no Rio de Janeiro do entreguerras. Nela, aparecem seus principais personagens, a vida em suas escolas e o universo de sua prática, afirmam os organizadores. Sua leitura na segunda década dos anos 2000 permite colocar em uma nova perspectiva a própria história da sexualidade no Brasil, um campo que hoje, como nos anos 1930, continua tensionado por inúmeros dilemas, conflitos e impasses.


Subject(s)
Humans , Andrology , Education, Medical/history , Sex Education/history , Sexology/history , Biographies as Topic , Brazil , Famous Persons , History of Medicine , Men's Health/history , Physicians/history , Urology/history
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