Home History List of Illustrations
Chapter Publicly Available

List of Illustrations

View more publications by University of California Press
© 2019 University of California Press, Berkeley

© 2019 University of California Press, Berkeley

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. List of Illustrations ix
  4. Acknowledgments xi
  5. Introduction: Toward a Global History of Sexual Science: Movements, Networks, and Deployments 1
  6. PART ONE. EVOLUTION, SEXUAL SCIENCE, AND THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF THE OTHER
  7. 1. Global Modernity and Sexual Science: Th e Case of Male Homosexuality and Female Prostitution, 1880–1950 29
  8. 2. “Let Us Leave the Hospital; Let Us Go on a Journey around the World”: British and German Sexual Science and the Global Search for Sexual Variation 51
  9. 3. Westermarck’s Morocco: Th e Epistemic Politics of Cultural Anthropology and Sexual Science 70
  10. 4. Monogamy’s Nature: Global Sexual Science and the Secularization of Christian Marriage 97
  11. 5. The “Hottentot Apron”: Genital Aberration in the History of Sexual Science 118
  12. PART TWO. SCIENCE BY THE BOOK AND UNRULY APPROPRIATIONS
  13. 6. Sexology in the Southwest: Law, Medicine, and Sexuality in Germany and Its Colonies 141
  14. 7 • Understanding R. D. Karve: Brahmacharya, Modernity, and the Appropriation of Global Sexual Science in Western India, 1927–1953 163
  15. 8. The “Ellis Effect”: Translating Sexual Science in Republican China, 1911–1949 186
  16. 9. Takahashi Tetsu and Popular Sexology in Early Postwar Japan, 1945–1970 211
  17. 10. Mexican Sexology and Male Homosexuality: Genealogies and Global Contexts, 1860–1957 232
  18. 11. The Science of Sexual Difference: Ogura Seizaburō, Hiratsuka Raichō, and the Intersection of Sexology and Feminism in Early-Twentieth-Century Japan 258
  19. 12. Time for Sex: Th e Education of Desire and the Conduct of Childhood in Global/Hindu Sexology 279
  20. PART THREE. MOBILITY, TRAVEL, EXILE, AND THE CIRCUITS OF SEXOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE
  21. 13. Latin Eugenics and Sexual Knowledge in Italy, Spain, and Argentina: International Networks across the Atlantic 305
  22. 14. “Forms So Attenuated That They Merge into Normality Itself”: Alexander Lipschütz, Gregorio Marañón, and Theories of Intersexuality in Chile, circa 1930 330
  23. 15. “Tyranny of Orgasm”: Global Governance of Sexuality from Bombay, 1930s–1950s 353
  24. 16. Magnus Hirschfeld’s Onnagata 374
  25. 17. Agnes Smedley between Berlin, Bombay, and Beijing: Sexology, Communism, and National Independence 398
  26. 18. The Limits of Transnationalism: The Case of Max Marcuse 422
  27. Afterword: In the Shadow of Empire: The Words and Worlds of Sexual Science 444
  28. List of Contributors 451
  29. Index 457
Downloaded on 18.10.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780520966673-001/html
Scroll to top button