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1.
Arch Sex Behav ; 51(2): 1363-1374, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34779978

ABSTRACT

In 1981, Cassell Australia published Paul Wilson's monograph, The Man They Called a Monster: Sexual Experiences Between Men and Boys. In his book, Wilson examines the case of Clarence Osborne, an older man who had "sexual relations" with around 2500 boys and adolescents over a twenty-year period. He uses Osborne's life to reflect on broader questions of pedophilia in Australian society. In this commentary, I revisit the book to consider its contemporary legacy 40 years on. According to Google Scholar, at the time of this writing, the book has only 50 citations, yet it is a book that continues to live on in our cultural imaginary for a variety of reasons, and in no small part due to its author, Paul Wilson, and his remarkably similar interaction with the criminal justice system in the decades since its publication. This commentary explores the historical context in which the book was written, pays particular attention to the changing social attitudes towards pedophilia, the recent controversy pertaining to its author, and discourses surrounding the sexual autonomy of minors.


Subject(s)
Pedophilia , Sex Offenses , Adolescent , Attitude , Australia , Child , Criminal Law/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Male , Minors , Pedophilia/history , Personal Autonomy , Sex Offenses/history , Sex Offenses/psychology , Sexual Behavior , Sociological Factors
2.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci ; 44(1): 66-88, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33497103

ABSTRACT

Women's experiences of sexual assault are rooted in and informed by a history that nurses need to understand in order to provide meaningful and effective care. In this article, we present a comprehensive literature review guided by intersectionality theory to deepen our understanding of the historical role that hegemonic masculinity plays in shaping ethnic minority women's experiences of sexual assault. Final sources included were analyzed using thematic analysis. On the basis of our analyses, we identified 4 themes: social order hierarchies, "othering" dynamics, economic labor divisions, and negative media/mass communication depiction. Our findings contribute to our understanding of these important histories that speak to the trauma of sexual violence inflicted upon the bodies of ethnic minority women, which we can incorporate into nursing education curricula. Incorporating this knowledge would equip nurses and allied health professionals with the necessary knowledge and skills that would enable them to help patients navigate multiple systems of oppression as they engage in help seeking following a sexual assault experience. This knowledge also acknowledges rather than dismisses the historically acceptable use of sexual violence against ethnic minority women. In addition, acknowledging these histories enables us to move forward as a society in engaging in an urgently needed cultural shift to address the hegemonic masculinities that perpetuate violence against women in the United States.


Subject(s)
Masculinity/history , Minority Groups/history , Sex Offenses/history , Women/history , Ethnicity , Female , Health Policy , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Male , United States
3.
Hist Psychiatry ; 32(1): 69-84, 2021 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33118402

ABSTRACT

The nineteenth century witnessed a great shift in how insanity was regarded and treated. Well documented is the emergence of psychiatry as a medical specialization and the role of lunatic asylums in the West. Unclear are the relationships between the heads of institutions and the individuals treated within them. This article uses two cases at either end of the nineteenth century to demonstrate sexual misdemeanours in sites of mental health care, and particularly how they were dealt with, both legally and in the press. They illustrate issues around cultures of complaint and the consequences of these for medical careers. Far from being representative, they highlight the need for further research into the doctor-patient relationship within asylums, and what happened when the boundaries were blurred.


Subject(s)
Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , Mentally Ill Persons/history , Physician-Patient Relations/ethics , Psychiatry/history , Sex Offenses/history , Administrative Personnel/history , England , Female , History, 19th Century , Humans , Ireland , Male , Mental Disorders/history , Rape/legislation & jurisprudence , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence
5.
Article in Spanish | LILACS, BIMENA | ID: biblio-1284515

ABSTRACT

Justificación: la bibliografía sobre delitos sexuales en el periodo de dominación hispánica en América (1492-1821) es escasa, existiendo importantes vacíos historiográficos que dificultan la reconstrucción de un panorama general del proceso penal conducido en esa época, por lo que, investigar el peritaje conducido en los casos de violación es un primer paso para rastrear la evolución del tratamiento de esos casos en las instituciones judiciales. Objetivo: describir cómo se ejecutaba el peritaje forense en los casos de violación sucedidos en la Honduras previo a su independencia política de España. Metodología: se adoptó un enfoque cualitativo con un diseño exploratorio, utilizándose fuentes primarias que fueron seleccionadas mediante muestreo no probabilístico. Resultados: se logró identificar dos casos en los cuales se hizo recurso de peritos para confirmar una violación. En ambos las expertas tenían el oficio de partera, brindando declaraciones que reflejan una falta de preparación profesional y un conocimiento basado en la experiencia. Las declaraciones fueron transcritas conservándose la ortografía de la época y comentadas para ubicarlas en su contexto. Conclusión: en la Honduras de los años previos a la independencia se realizaba un peritaje forense en casos de violación basado en la experiencia laboral de los peritos y no en información científica o preparación académica, esto condujo a que los juicios de los expertos se vieran afectados por sus sesgos culturales...(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , History, 15th Century , History, 16th Century , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , Sex Offenses/history , Coroners and Medical Examiners , Rape , Midwifery
6.
Med Hist ; 63(4): 411-434, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31571694

ABSTRACT

A tropology of moral injury and corruption long framed the plight of the sex crime victim. Nineteenth-century psychiatric acknowledgment of adverse sexual experience reflected general trends in etiological thought, especially on 'epileptic' and hysteric seizures, but on the whole remained descriptive, guarded and limited. Various experiential threats to the modern sexual self beyond assault and rape were granted etiological significance, however: illegitimate motherhood, masturbatory guilt, sexual enlightenment, 'homosexual seduction' and chance encounters leading to fetishistic fixation. These minor early appeals to medical psychology help us appreciate the multiple nuances of 'sexual trauma' advanced in Breuer and Freud's Studies on Hysteria (1895) and Freud's subsequent work.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse, Sexual/history , Psychiatry/history , Rape/psychology , Sex Offenses/history , Adult , Child , Child Abuse, Sexual/psychology , Female , History, 19th Century , Humans , Male , Paraphilic Disorders/history , Paraphilic Disorders/psychology , Psychoanalysis/history , Sex Offenses/psychology
7.
Violence Against Women ; 25(13): 1558-1577, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31506021

ABSTRACT

This essay examines two Portuguese novels about colonialism and its legacies: António Lobo Antunes's Fado Alexandrino (1983) and Aida Gomes's Os Pretos de Pousaflores (The Blacks from Pousaflores) (2011). Fado Alexandrino perpetuates the use of Black women's raped bodies as a plot device to represent colonial violence, while Gomes's narrative empowers racialized victims of sexual abuse and challenges dominant public memories of the Colonial War. A close reading of these novels, contextualized against the background of scholarly debates about the representation of sexual violence, exposes both the perils and potential of cultural works to preserve the memory of rape in armed conflict.


Subject(s)
Colonialism/history , Sex Offenses/psychology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Human Rights/history , Human Rights/psychology , Humans , Journalism , Portugal , Racism/history , Racism/psychology , Sex Offenses/history
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.
J Homosex ; 66(7): 937-969, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29883282

ABSTRACT

This article explores queer sexual policing in late Imperial St. Petersburg (c.1900-1917). The focus is on the street-level constables who bore the principal responsibility for policing male homosexual offenses in the city's public and semi-public spaces. This emphasis on the street-level policing of homosexuality contrasts with other discussions of gay urban history and the oppression of queer men by the authorities. The article draws on new evidence from precinct-level police archives to complement and challenge previous discussions of queer sexual policing in the Imperial capital. By taking the fate of queer men in an autocratic city, this article refines our understanding of the ways in which homosexual practices and identities emerged in modern times. Specifically, it builds on Michel Foucault's descriptions of constables as "arbiters of illegalities," where the term arbiter suggests rule-based and yet discretionary coercion. Here, the influential model of disciplinary policing of sexuality is complemented by an emphasis on the role of discretionary power in the history of homosexuality.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Male/history , Police/history , Sexual and Gender Minorities/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Russia , Sex Offenses/history , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence , Sexual and Gender Minorities/legislation & jurisprudence
10.
Notes Rec R Soc Lond ; 71(2): 213-26, 2017 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30125060

ABSTRACT

Lurid tales of the criminal use of hypnosis captured both popular and scholarly attention across Europe during the closing decades of the nineteenth century, culminating not only in the invention of fictional characters such as du Maurier's Svengali but also in heated debates between physicians over the possibilities of hypnotic crime and the application of hypnosis for forensic purposes. The scholarly literature and expert advice that emerged on this topic at the turn of the century highlighted the transnational nature of research into hypnosis and the struggle of physicians in a large number of countries to prise hypnotism from the hands of showmen and amateurs once and for all. Making use of the 1894 Czynski trial, in which a Baroness was putatively hypnotically seduced by a magnetic healer, this paper will examine the scientific, popular and forensic tensions that existed around hypnotism in the German context. Focusing, in particular, on the expert testimony about hypnosis and hypnotic crime during this case, the paper will show that, while such trials offered opportunities to criminalize and pathologize lay hypnosis, they did not always provide the ideal forum for settling scientific questions or disputes.


Subject(s)
Crime/history , Expert Testimony , Hypnosis/history , Sex Offenses/history , Female , Germany , History, 19th Century , Humans , Male , Physicians/history , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence
11.
J Homosex ; 64(14): 1943-1960, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28001500

ABSTRACT

This comparative social-historical study examines different versions of state-socialist body politics manifested in Hungary and Slovenia mainly during the 1950s by using archive material of "unnatural fornication" court cases. By analyzing the available Hungarian "természet elleni fajtalanság" and Slovenian "nenaravno obcevanje" court cases, we can shed light on how the defendants were treated by the police and the judiciary. On the basis of these archive data that have never been examined before from these angles, we can construct an at least partial picture of the practices and consequences of state surveillance of same-sex-attracted men during state-socialism. The article explores the functioning of state-socialist social control mechanisms directed at nonnormative sexualities that had long-lasting consequences on the social representation of homosexuality in both countries.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Male , Socialism , History, 20th Century , Homosexuality, Male/history , Humans , Hungary , Male , Politics , Population Surveillance , Sex Offenses/history , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence , Slovenia , Socialism/history , Yugoslavia
12.
J Psychohist ; 43(4): 277-87, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27108472

ABSTRACT

Jean-Martin Charcot who studied hysteria at the Salpetriere hospital in Paris late in the nineteenth century is often portrayed as a great neurologist. According to standard accounts, his female hysterical patients imitated the seizures of epileptic patients at the Salpetriere in order to get attention because of their dramatic, self-centered natures. They were also prone to making false allegations of childhood sexual abuse. In fact, the so-called hysterical seizures were often abreactions of rapes. The patients commonly had extensive childhood sexual abuse histories, and sexual misconduct by doctors was endemic at the Salpetriere. The pathological counter-transference towards "hysterical women" at the Salpetriere has been repeated in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries in attitudes expressed towards dissociative identity disorder.


Subject(s)
Dissociative Identity Disorder/history , Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , Hysteria/history , Sex Offenses/history , Adult , Dissociative Identity Disorder/diagnosis , Dissociative Identity Disorder/psychology , Female , History, 19th Century , Humans , Hysteria/diagnosis , Hysteria/psychology , Middle Aged , Paris , Sex Offenses/psychology , Young Adult
13.
J Homosex ; 63(2): 250-77, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26295374

ABSTRACT

This article analyses a television broadcast in England in 1957 in response to the Wolfenden Report (Wolfenden, 1957) into homosexuality and prostitution. Here I argue that those participants in the broadcast who are sympathetic with liberal reforms of the legislation on homosexuality utilize discourses related to normality and the public/private domains to discursively construct the Wolfenden homonormative male. In addition, I also show how, particularly through the trope of homonormativity, both the heterosexual and homosexual audiences are interpellated by the discourses exploited within the broadcast as publics whose subjectivities are reconfigured toward Wolfenden homonormativity.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Male/history , Sex Offenses/history , Social Norms , Television/history , England , Heterosexuality/physiology , History, 20th Century , Humans , Legislation as Topic/history , Male , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence , Stereotyping
14.
Local Popul Stud ; (96): 50-65, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29939515

ABSTRACT

This article explores the potential reasons for and extent of bigamy in London in the early nineteenth century. The nature of the criminal offence is considered, examining the evidence required to secure a conviction, and the penalties imposed. Based largely on records of Old Bailey convictions, together with associated newspaper reports, the varied personal circumstances of those involved are noted. Some were victims of the system; others were exploited targets of their callous partner. Gender distinctions are considered and the sentences imposed analysed to ascertain how they reflected society's view of the particular misconduct.


Subject(s)
Marital Status , Sex Offenses/history , History, 19th Century , Humans , London , Marital Status/statistics & numerical data , Sex Factors , Sex Offenses/statistics & numerical data
15.
Poiésis (En línea) ; 30: 36-43, 2016.
Article in Spanish | LILACS, COLNAL | ID: biblio-999719

ABSTRACT

En el artículo se reflexiona sobre las condiciones relacionales del maltrato infantil en sus diferentes manifestaciones, siendo la violencia sexual una de las cuales ha sido ampliamente utilizada en el marco del conflicto armado, así como replicada y naturalizada al interior de las construcciones familiares. Se parte de la comprensión de las relaciones familiares desde el plano humano, teniendo claro que así como protegen y nutren afectivamente a sus miembros, también los dañan y los victimizan especialmente en escenarios de conflicto. Finalmente se plantea la necesidad de migrar a nuevas estrategias de intervención psicosocial que contemplen la complejidad del conflicto armado en Colombia, la subjetividad presente en las realidades de sus actores y las necesidades de quienes pretenden ser reparados.


The article reflects on the relational conditions of child maltreatment in its different manifestations, sexual violence being one of which has been a widely used in the context of armed conflict, as well as replicated and naturalized to the interior of family constructions. Be part of the understanding of relationships familiar from the human plane, being clear that as well as protect and nourish affect their members, they also harm and victimize them especially in conflict scenarios. Finally, there is a need to migrate to new strategies of psychosocial intervention that take into account the complexity of the armed conflict in Colombia, the subjectivity present in the realities of its actors and the needs of who want to be repaired.


Subject(s)
Humans , Domestic Violence , Sex Offenses/history , Child Abuse, Sexual , Child Abuse , Armed Conflicts/psychology
17.
Hist Psychol ; 18(3): 312-23, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26375158

ABSTRACT

This article examines protests of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) in the mid-1980s to show how feminists working in mental health fields grappled with the tensions between their politics and their work. I argue that the DSM became a site where women attempted to tease out issues relating to gender, professionalization, and the power and stakes of labeling. Feminists privileged a sociological reading of gender, which butted up against mental health care workers' professional investment in psychiatric ones. Women's responses to the DSM, however, reveal that the line between the sociological and the pathological was unclear. This debate over labels is exemplified by a proposal to diagnose rapists as mentally ill. Women's advocates framed sexual assault as an issue of violence against women, rather than an issue of male sexuality. For many women, the American Psychiatric Association's proposal implied that rape was a primarily sexual act, and that male socialization needn't be examined. Others, however, saw this as one more way to label and address bad male behavior; psychiatric treatment might not ultimately put an end to rape, but these women saw any sort of treatment as a step forward. For women professionals, this proposal and the DSM more broadly raised questions about whether the 2 frameworks could be integrated, and whether psychological treatments for social problems were appropriate.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Feminism/history , Mental Disorders/history , Rape , Sex Offenses/history , Sexism/history , Stereotyping , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Mental Disorders/classification , United States
18.
Osiris ; 30: 272-94, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27066628

ABSTRACT

This essay examines the medical and legal construction of predatory masculinity in New Spain by contrasting criminal cases of rape [estupro] with those of violent or coercive sodomy [sodomía]. In the context of male-female rape, the rulings of most criminal and ecclesiastical courts imply that predatory masculinity was a "natural" manifestation of male sexual desire, whereas in cases of sodomy and nonconsensual sexual acts between men, courts viewed such desire as "against nature." The processes by which the colonial state prosecuted certain sexual crimes simultaneously criminalized and validated predatory masculinity. By analyzing the roles of the medics, surgeons, and midwives who examined the bodies of the male and female victims in these cases, this essay argues for a commonality in the authoritative judgments based on medical evidence, whether conclusive or inconclusive.


Subject(s)
Masculinity/history , Sex Offenses/history , Central America , Coercion , Female , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Homosexuality, Male/history , Homosexuality, Male/psychology , Humans , Male , Men , Mexico , Rape/psychology , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence , Sex Offenses/psychology
19.
J Homosex ; 62(3): 273-96, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25264568

ABSTRACT

In this article, I analyze "personal experience stories around the homosexual" that entered into the parliamentary debates on the Sexual Offences Act in Britain in the 1950s and 1960s and shaped understandings of sexual citizenship in particular ways. Specific attention is paid to the effects of political storytelling involved in the making of British sexual citizens. I explore how the paradoxical figure of the evil homosexual emerges and how politicians, in telling stories of the evil homosexuality, police the border that can effectively separate sexual outsiders from sexual citizens. I conclude with an analysis of these stories, and how their telling is closely linked to the postwar social welfare thinking in Britain.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Male/history , Sex Offenses/history , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Crime Victims/history , Crime Victims/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Morals , Politics , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence , United Kingdom
20.
Femina ; 42(4): 209-215, jul-ago. 2014. ilus
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-737138

ABSTRACT

Objetivo: Análise do histórico da violência contra a mulher desde sua gênese até a situação atual do enfrentamento a violência sexual no Brasil, através de políticas governamentais de atendimento a essas vítimas. Afinal, superar esta violência hoje é um dos maiores desafios no atendimento à saúde da mulher. Método: Foi realizada uma revisão sistemática sobre o assunto tendo como referência um estudo documental na literatura pertinente, além das normas técnicas do Ministério da Saúde. Conclusões: Ratifica-se a importância do conhecimento sobre o assunto e do atendimento adequado às vítimas de violência sexual, para que estas não sofram as consequências de tal agravo.(AU)


Objective: Historical analysis of violence against women since its genesis up to the current situation of confronting sexual violence in Brazil, through government assistence policies for these victims, since overcoming this violence is now one of the biggest challenges in health care of women. Method: A systematic review on the subject was performed with reference to a desk study of the relevant literature, as well as the technical standards of the Ministry of Health. Conclusions: It confirms the importance of knowledge on the subject and appropriate care to victims of sexual violence, so they do not suffer the consequences of such harm.(AU)


Subject(s)
Female , Pregnancy , Rape , Sex Offenses/history , Spouse Abuse/history , Women's Health , Violence Against Women , Pregnancy, Unwanted , Women's Rights , Brazil , Adaptation, Psychological , Health Policy
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