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Section 3: Sexology not in German (I-N)
Section 4: Sexology not in German (O-R)
Section 5: Sexology not in German (S-Z)
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Chapters on alcohol, amphetamines, antidepresants, bartiturates, benzodiazepines, cocaine, coffee, haluucinogens, marihuana, tobacco, etc.
Contains a complete list of grants and of published reports of sponsored investigations.
Contains P. P. G. Bateson's "Specificity and the Origins of Behavior"; Paul Rozin's "The Selection of Foods by Rats, Humans, and Other Animals"; Bennett G. Galef's "Social Transmission of Acquired Behavior: A Discussion of Tradition and Social Learning in Vertebrates"; Sara Blaffer Hrdy's "Care and Exploitation of Nonhuman Primate Infants by Conspecifics Other Than the Mother"; J. B. Hutchison's "Hypothalamic Mechanisms of Sexual Behavior, with Special Reference to Birds"; George N. Wade's "Sex Hormones, Regulatory Behaviors, and Body Weight."
456 entries with lengthy annotations.
The result of a study by the International Alliance for Psychoanalytic Study of Social Issues.
"An important early study on the role of a woman's hormones and sexual cycle on the dream and its function" [Parsifal-Charles. The Dream: 4,000 Years of Theory and Practice.
All published of Bloch's never completed comprehensive history of prostitution, part one of the second volume being completed after Bloch's death by Georg Loewenstein. Haeberle 1983 p. 7: "He considered prostitution the central problem of sexology, since it combined the biological and cultural aspects of sex in the most dramatic and obvious fashion. … Nothing comparable has ever been attempted again."
A pioneering and widely influential study of sexuality.
Grinstein S-3510.
Grinstein 10466; Norman Catalog F88.
In his preface Freud avers that Bourke's book confirms that infants derive pleasure and interest from excremental functions and that the sexual and excremental functions are intimately connected.
Bowman was at Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, where he taught a course on marriage.
Papers given by the participants at the III Congrès de l'Association catholique internationale d'e'tudes me'dico- psychologiques.
I: Les propriétés des hormones sexuelles par E. C. Dodds, R. Courrier, Ruth Deanesly, F. Caridrot, A.S. Parkes. II: Ovulation, menstruation, gestation par Edgar Allen, S. Zuckerman, G. Hartman, L. Hisaw, Marc Klein. III: L'hypophyse par Aura E. Severinghaus, Philip E. Smith, P. Ancel, S. Aschheim, F. G. Young. IV: Régulations générales, influence des facteurs nerveux et externes par F. H. A. Marshall, Remy Collin, Jacques Benoit, L. Desclin, Lucien Brouha.
OCLC locates only the Wellcome copy. Despite the Latin title, the text is in English. An anti-masturbation treatise. A second, slightly expanded edition appeared in 1822.
Contains Bullough's "Prostitution, Psychiatry and History."
A selection of 14 of Burhnam's papers. Includes papers on psychoanalysis, sex, progressivism, behaviorism, moral standards, etc.
Chronicles the scandals of the French aristocracy prior to the French revolution.
Descriptions of unusual and unsavory diseases, especially those contracted by French Royalty from debauchery.
Also published by Citadel Press.
A quite explicit guide for its time near the beginning of the sexual revolution. An analysand of Stekel and a student of A. A. Brill, Caprio was a psychiatrist who advocated an enlightened and nonprudish attitude toward sexual behavior through the publication of his numerous books for both professional and lay audiences.
Translation of Recherches psychanalytiques nouvelles sur la sexualité féminine, Paris, 1964.
Published 1972 in England as Reich and Sexual Freedom.
OCLC records only 5 copies: Cornell, Indiana, Countway, Oregeon State, & Vanderbilt. With papers by Clark Wissler, William I. Thomas, Adolf Meyer, E. W. Burgess, William Healy, Florence Goodenough, Walter B. Cannon, Robert M. Yerkes, and many others.
An exposition of the facts of endocrinology as they relate to male & female sexuality. Connell was an ob-gyn specialist, Davis a urologist, and Goldzieher & Wallace endocrinologists.
Not in OCLC, the earliest version in OCLC being the 1945 revised edition attributed to Jean Whitehill.
Anonymously published jeremiad against sexual vice, reprinted a number of times into the 1890s. The first edition is uncommon. Contains chapters on the education & training of boys, girls, young men & young women; male & female masturbation; the sacred rights of offspring [abortion]; the physiology of marriage; woman without Christianity; psycho-physiological comparison of the sexes; what can woman do in the world?; prostitution; and happiness in wedlock.
A period marriage manual.
14 papers, 8 of which had been presented at two meetings of the American Psychological Association in 1970 & 1971.
Freeman #982.
Of extraordinary importance for the development of all the human sciences. The word evolution occurs for the first time in any of Darwin's works on page 2.
19th century American spiritualist and one of the founders of modern spiritualism, Davis began his spiritualist career in 1844, when in a semitrance he wandered away and awoke the next morning 40 miles from home in the mountains, where he claimed to have met two men that he later identified as Galen and Swedenborg. He began teaching and on a professional tour met a Dr. Lyon (a Bridgeport musician) and Rev. William Fishbough. Lyon was appointed his magnetizer and Fishbough his scribe. With their assistance Davis dictated The Principles of Nature, which was published in 1847 and went into many editions. In it he predicted the coming of the Spiritualist movement, which his book probably helped to bring into being as well as shaping the climate of popular opinion that made the emergence of Spiritualism possible, or even likely. His book, which articulated a radically dualist, Swedenborgesque mystical philosophy, made him famous. By early 1848 he no longer needed his magnetizer, since he was then able to self-induce his trance states, in which he made his predictions and medical diagnoses. He remembered his trance experiences and wrote his many books based on his trance experiences. The later books are largely elaborations on the themes of Harmonial philosophy announced in The Principles of Nature and systematically elaborated in the volumes of The Great Harmonia, which alone passed through 40 editions. See Melton's Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology, 4th ed., I: 301-302.In the present book, a follow-up to the fourth volume of Davis's Great Harmonia (which dealt with marriage and "the physiological vices and virtues"), Davis founds his mystical philosophy on a fundamental binary opposition, which he calls "male" and "female," with the former being the source of the material world and the latter of the spiritual. Davis posits a series of such related binary dyads: Feminine/Masculine; Matter/Energy; Goodness/Truth; Love/Intellect, which play out at every level from the cosmic to the human. Sex then, for Davis, is a cosmic principle for unifying opposites. The bulk of his text is devoted to working out the consequences of his metaphysical theory of Harmony for married partners and for society in general. Conjugal love turns out to be the foundation of society, with incorrect unions resulting in disease, crime, and death. Davis is, so far as I know, never regarded as a philosopher; yet he articulated a comprehensive, radically dualist, American metaphysics that was probably read by and influenced more 19th century Americans than all the academic treatises of philosophy combined.
With a 50-page scholarly introduction by Aldington.
OCLC locates copies only at Indiana & Harvard. A Reichian treatment that opens with a quote from Reich.
OCLC locates copies in Anglo-America only at Cornell, NLM, and Wellcome. Demangeon was a Paris physician who had earlier published a widely read report of Gall's lectures. Contains a chapter on hermaphroditism.
Grinstein 6784. Deutsch's first monograph and the standard Freudian text on female psychosexuality until replaced some 20 years later by her two-volume treatise on the psychology of women.
Contains 6 chapters: The New Mother; The Renovation of the Family; The Function of Taboos; The Revaluation of Obscenity; The Control of Population; Eugenics and the Future.
(Originally issued as Vol. II in the series).
Volue I of the series, originally issued as volume II.
Volume 4 of the series.
Section 2: Sexology not in German (F-H)
Section 3: Sexology not in German (I-N)
Section 4: Sexology not in German (O-R)
Section 5: Sexology not in German (S-Z)
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