Deutsch
Espaņol
Home Inside FQS Features Services Submission FAQ Press + Advertising
Search Print
Thematic Issues
Debates
Reviews
Interviews
Conferences
Links
 

Volume 6, No. 1, Art. 10 – January 2005

The Early Homosexual Self Between Autobiography and Medical Commentary

Tilmann Walter (Germany)

Abstract: The history of the "early homosexual self" can be divided into three phases: the time of "latent" autobiographies (until ca 1865), then the time of the activation of "homosexual knowledge" by medical experts and (since ca 1895) the time of silencing homosexual voices within experts' discourse. Around 1900 homosexual behavior was already bound to the "script" of the "homosexual" self and considered thereby a "disease" by most experts, what was not often confirmed by the people concerned. Within historical publications the "homosexuals" therefore were often presented as "victims" of medical science. I argue that subjects submitted themselves to valid social norms by "flexible normalization." Pertinent historical sources are interpreted in the light of a model for a personal development within therapeutical relationships. In the meantime, the unified anthropology of scientia sexualis has significantly lost importance: sexuality and gender are now considered to be "negotiated," and the difference in the lives of "heterosexual" and "homosexual" men—and of many working women—has become negligible. One can interpret this as an outcome of the change from a producing society to consuming society during the time when (ca 1900) the "homosexual" male functioned as a social "avant-garde."

Key words: history of homosexuality, history of psychotherapy

This contribution is only available as a full text in the German language. German text


Last update: 11/22/2004

Volume 6, No. 1   Table of Contents

[qualitative-research.net] [Home] [Inside FQS] [Features] [Services] [Submission]
[FAQ] [Advertising] [Search FQS] [Newsletter] [Editorial Team]

© 2005 Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research
(ISSN 1438-5627)

Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft