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In: Journal of black sexuality and relationships, Band 9, Heft 3-4, S. 301-326
ISSN: 2376-7510
In: The Journal of sex research, Band 28, Heft 4, S. 593-602
ISSN: 1559-8519
In: The Journal of sex research, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 145-156
ISSN: 1559-8519
In: The Journal of sex research, Band 18, Heft 4, S. 305-323
ISSN: 1559-8519
In: Ethnic Studies Review, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 96-112
ISSN: 2576-2915
Race, war, and geography remain unmarked domains within the historiography of sexuality. This article analyzes the work of Joseph M. Carrier, a seminal figure who helped develop the study of homosexuality. In this article, we examine the ways Carrier incorporated studies of various populations from the Global South, from Vietnamese refugees to Mexican MSM (men who have sex with men). In his attempt to collect knowledge about subaltern groups—first as a RAND Corporation researcher and later as an anthropologist and epidemiologist—Carrier shows us that the genealogy of homosexuality studies is not clear-cut. It is situated across multiple spaces of (inter)disciplinary power and knowledge. By comparing these trans-regional areas of study, we examine the ways in which Western social scientists can draw research from one social context into another.
In: Gender & history, Band 31, Heft 2, S. 256-265
ISSN: 1468-0424
In: Modern intellectual history: MIH, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 33-60
ISSN: 1479-2451
As the foundational contributions of thefin de sièclesexual science movement to research on sexuality continue to be fleshed out, new avenues of understanding this important movement will continue to emerge. This essay uncovers the explosive intersection of early sexual science and strains of first-wave feminism in Vienna and charts the emergence of anti-essentialist feminism from this intersection. The first section offers an interpretation of how the discipline of sexual science emerged from medical criminology and how these origins contributed to the misogynist inflection of early sexology. The essay then chronicles the intersection of first-wave feminism and this misogynist sexual science. The central argument is that feminists' encounters with sexual science dialectically produced an anti-essentialist variant of feminism. This microscopic interpretation of historical context, it will be argued, provides a new vista from which to view the larger tableau of modern European, especially Austrian, intellectual history.
This volume tells the story of the case study genre at a time when it became the genre par excellence for discussing human sexuality across the humanities and the life sciences. A History of the Case Study takes the reader on a transcontinental journey from the imperial world of fin-de-siècle Central Europe to the interwar metropolises of Weimar Germany, and to the United States of America in the post-war years.
Foregrounding the figures of case study pioneers, and highlighting their radical engagements with the genre, the work scrutinises the case writing practices of Sigmund Freud and his predecessor sexologist Richard von Krafft-Ebing; writers such as Leopold von Sacher-Masoch and Weimar intellectuals such as Erich Wulffen. There result new insights into the continuing legacy of such writers, and into the agency increasingly claimed by the readerships that emerged with the development of modernity—from readers who self-identified as masochists, to conmen and female criminals.
In: Lesbian & Gay Psychology Review, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 114-115
ISSN: 2976-8772
Disorders of Desire is the only book to tell the story of the development and impact of sexology-the scientific study of sex-in the United States. In this era of sex scandals, culture wars, ""Sex in the City,"" and new sexual enhancement technologies (like erectile dysfunction drugs), its critique of sexology is even more relevant than it was when the book was first published in 1990. This revised and expanded edition features new chapters addressing: The diagnosis of ""sex addiction""in the 1970s and its social and political implications
In: Frontiers: a journal of women studies, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 66
ISSN: 1536-0334
In: Journal of colonialism & colonial history, Band 5, Heft 3
ISSN: 1532-5768