Difference between revisions of "Bibliography: Treatment of LGBT People by Doctors and Psychologists"

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=Alphabeticall Bibliography on the Medical Treatment of Homosexuals and Other Sexual and Gender Variants=
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Banay, Ralph S., and Davidoff, L. "Apparent Recovery of a Sex Psychopath after Lobotomy," Journal of Criminal Psychopathology. Vol. 4, no. 1 (July 1942): p. 59-66.
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This section includes the Bibliography and Backnotes from the section on "Treatment" in {{GAH}}, pages 589-599.<ref>In the acknowledgements in that section, Katz thanks "James D. Steakley for his help in compiling this part, and for writing a first draft of the general introduction and introductions to the documents. Responsibility for the final versions is my own." For hysterectomy as treatment, see {{GAH}}, Part 3, "Passing Women," p. 276, 606n. 69.</ref>
  
  
Barlow, David H.; Leitenberg, Harold; and Agras, W. Stewart. "Experimental Control of Sexual Deviations through Manipulation of the Noxious Scene in Covert Sensitization," Journal of Abnormal Psychology. Vol. 74, no. 5 (1969): p. 596-601. (P. 598, 601.)
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The medical, surgical, and psychological treatments documented here include, in alphabetical order of their various names:
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:::adaption therapy, asexualization, astrology, Aesthetic Realism, aversion therapy, behavior therapy, castration, chemical and surgical, conditioned reaction technique, conditioning, correction hospitals, covert sensitization, electroshock, group therapy, hysterectomy incarceration, Homo-Anonymous, hypnotic-aversion treatment, hypnotic suggestion, lobotomy, LSD, Metrazol, musical analysis, Organotherapy, ovariectomy, primal therapy, psychoanalysis, psychotherapy, pudic nerve section, relationship therapy, Scientology, sex-hormone medication, sex mutilation, shock treatment, sterilization, suggestive therapy, surgery, systematic desensitization, testosterone administration, Vegetotherapy.
  
  
Bergler, Edmund. "Eight Prerequisites for the Psychoanalytic Treatment of Homosexuality," ''Psychoanalytic Review'' (N.Y.), vol. 3 I (1944); see especially p. 255, 260, 266, 268-69, 277-79, 281-86.
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==See also: [[Timeline: Treatment of LGBT People by Doctors and Psychologists]]==
  
  
Bergler, Edmund. "Suppositions about the Mechanism of Criminosis," ''Journal of Criminal Psychopathology'', vol. 5 (1943), p. 215-46 (especially case 4, p. 235). Permission to reprint excerpts from Bergler's reports was denied Jonathan Ned Katz when he was preparing {{GAH}}.
 
  
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=Bibliography, Alphabetical=
  
Blair, Ralph. Etiological and Treatment Literature on Homosexuality. Otherwise Monograph Ser., no. 5. National Task Force on Student Personnel Services and Homosexuality, 1972.
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Abramson, Harold A. "Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD-25), III. As an Adjunct to Psychotherapy with Elimination of Fear of Homosexuality," ''Journal of Psychology,'' vol. 39 (Jan. 1955), p. 127-55. Abramson presents a verbatim recording of a four-hour interview with a forty-year-old woman, who under the influence of LSD, speaks of her fear of Lesbianism. Abramson was the LSD expert, trusted by the CIA, who in Nov. 1953 twice examined Frank R. Olson--just before Olson committed suicide as a result of his involuntary participation in a CIA drug experiment (''New York Times'', July 11,1975, p. 34, col. 5)·
:Primal therapy, Vegetotherapy, musical analysis, astrology, Scientology, and Aesthetic Realism are documented, pages 36-37. See also "Part II: Treatment," for a documented discussion and summary of the subject.
 
  
  
Bowman, Karl M. "Sexual Deviation Research." Report to California Assembly, Judiciary Subcommittee on Sex Research, Sacramento, Calif., March 1952, p. 80.
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AIinder, Gary. "Gay Liberation Meets the Shrinks," in ''Out of the Closets; Voice of Gay Liberation'', eds. Karla Jay and Allen Young (N.Y.: Douglass, 1972), pages 141-45.  
  
 
Bowman, Karl M., and Engle, Bernice. "The Problem of Homosexuality," Journal of Social Hygiene. Vol. 39, no. I (1953): p. 2-16. (P. 10-11.)
 
  
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Aschaffenburg, Helga. "Relationship Therapy with a Homosexual: A Case History," ''Pastoral Counselor'', vol. 4, no. I (1964), p. 412;
  
Brill, A. A. "The Conception of Homosexuality," ''Journal of the American Medical Association''. Vol. 61 (Aug. 2, 1913): p. 335-40.
 
  
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Banay, Ralph S. and L. Davidoff. "Apparent Recovery of a Sex Psychopath after Lobotomy," ''Journal of Criminal Psychopathology'' (N.Y.), vol. 4, no. I (July 1942), p. 59-66. Here the doctors report that after lobotomy the patient's masturbation stopped, he became "complacent" and "tranquil," and "showed no sign of conflict with his environment." He "remained courteous, meek, obliging and attentive." The doctors conclude that lobotomy "might be a new and important development." A psychological dynamic here, unrecognized by the doctors, is a masochistic subject asking for a lobotomy, and the sadistic physicians obliging.
  
Buck, W. D. "A Raid on the Uterus," ''New York Medical Journal'', vol. 5 (August 1866), p. 464.
 
:In an extract from an address in 1866 by Dr. W. D. Buck, President of the New Hampshire State Medical Society, the doctor says: "A distinguished surgeon in New York city, twenty-five years ago [1841], said, when [Guillaume] Dupuytren's operation for relaxation of the sphincter ani was in vogue, every young man who came from Paris found every other individual's anus too large, and proceeded to pucker it up. The result was that New York anuses looked like gimlet-holes in a piece of pork." Buck goes on to say that the uterus, also, is being subjected to "surgical operations, and is now-a-days subject to all sorts of barbarity from surgeons anxious for notoriety." His statement, which bears further analysis, seems aimed at primitive abortion and birth control measures.  A brief biography of Dupuytren is in John Talbott, A Biographical History of Medicine (N.Y.: Grune & Stratton, 1970), p. 342-44. Jonathan Ned Katz thanks Stephen W. Foster and Dennis Lampkowski for help with this research.
 
  
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Barahal, Hyman S. "Testosterone in Psychotic Male Homosexuals," ''Psychiatric Quarterly'', vol. 14, no. 2 (1940), pages 319-30.
  
Bullough, Vern L., and Martha Voght. "Homosexuality and the 'Secret Sin' in Pre-Freudian America,"'' Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences'', vol. 28, no. 2 (April 1973), p. 143-55.
 
:Surgical measures for masturbation, satyriasis, etc., are cited.
 
 
  
Caprio, Frank S. ''Female Homosexuality; A Psychodynamic Study of Lesbianism.'' Foreword by Karl M. Bowman. N.Y.: Grove Press, Evergreen Black Cat, 1962. (P. 299-301, 304.)
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Barker-Benfield, G. J. ''The Horrors of the Half-Known Life; Male Attitudes Toward Women and Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century America'' (N.Y.: Harper & Row, 1976).  Surgical measures for masturbation, satyriasis, etc., are cited; on sexual surgery, p. 82-83, 88-90, 91 iI., 97, 104, 120-32, 286-87, 292-93.
  
  
Cautela, Joseph R. "Covert Sensitization," Psychological Reports. Vol. 20, no. 2 (1967): p. 459-68. (P. 464-65·)  
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Barlow, David H.; Leitenberg, Harold; and Agras, W. Stewart. "Experimental Control of Sexual Deviations through Manipulation of the Noxious Scene in Covert Sensitization," Journal of Abnormal Psychology. Vol. 74, no. 5 (1969): p. 596-601. (P. 598, 601.)  
  
  
Chideckel, Maurice. Female Sex Perversion. N.Y.: Eugenics Pub. Co., 1938.  
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Barr, Martin W. "Some Notes on Asexualization; with a Report of Eighteen Cases". ''Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease'' (Lancaster, Pennsylvania), vol. 51, no. 3 (March 1920), p. 231-41. Includes references to females.
  
  
Daniel, F. E. "Castration of Sexual Perverts," ''Texas Medical Journa''l (Austin), Aug. 1893: 255-71. Reprinted in ''Texas Medical Journal''. Vol. 27, no. 10 (April 1912): p. 369-85· A note (p. 369) adds: "Under the title, 'Should Insane Criminals or Sexual Perverts be Permitted to Procreate?' this paper was read at the Joint Session of the World's Columbian Auxiliary Congress--Section of Medical Jurisprudence--and the International Medico-Legal Congress, August 16th, 1893, and also before the American Medico-Legal Society, New York, October 11th, 1893, and published in the 'Medico-Legal Journal' for December, and in the 'Psychological Bulletin,' New York." Dr. Daniel is identified in the 1912 reprint as the editor of the ''Texas Medical Journal''.
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Bien, Ernest. "Why Do Homosexuals Undergo Treatment?," ''Anthropos'' (N.Y.), vol. I, no. I (Jan. 1934), p. 5-18; also in ''Medical Review of Reviews'', vol. 40, no. I (Jan. 1934), p. 18-51.
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Bergler, Edmund. "Eight Prerequisites for the Psychoanalytic Treatment of Homosexuality," ''Psychoanalytic Review'' (N.Y.), vol. 3 I (1944); see especially p. 255, 260, 266, 268-69, 277-79, 281-86.
  
Deutsch, Helene. "On Female Homosexuality," authorized trans. Edith B. Jackson, Psychoanalytic Quarterly. Vol. I (Oct. 1932): p. 484-510. (P. 484-88, 490--91.). A second trans.: "Homosexuality in Women," International Journal of Psychoanalysis. Vol. 14 (1933): p. 34-56.
 
  
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Bergler, Edmund. "Suppositions about the Mechanism of Criminosis," ''Journal of Criminal Psychopathology'', vol. 5 (1943), p. 215-46 (especially case 4, p. 235). Permission to reprint excerpts from Bergler's reports was denied during the preparation of {{GAH}}.
  
Deutsch, Nicholas. Interviewed by Jonathan Katz. N.Y.C., Oct. 17, 1974.
 
  
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Bernstein, Irving C. "Homosexuality in Gynecologic Practice," ''South Dakota Journal of Medicine'', vol. 21 (March 1968), pages 33-39.
  
Ellis, Havelock. "A Note on the Treatment of Sexual Inversion," Alienist and Neurologist. Vol. 17 (July 1896): p. 257-64. (P. 258-59.)
 
  
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Blair, Ralph. Etiological and Treatment Literature on Homosexuality. Otherwise Monograph Ser., no. 5. National Task Force on Student Personnel Services and Homosexuality, 1972. Primal therapy, Vegetotherapy, musical analysis, astrology, Scientology, and Aesthetic Realism are documented, pages 36-37. See also "Part II: Treatment," for a documented discussion and summary of the subject.
  
Ellis, Havelock. "Sexual Inversion in Women," Alienist and Neurologist. Vol. 16, no. 2 (April 1895): 141-58. (P. 158.)
 
  
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Bowman, Karl M. "Sexual Deviation Research." Report to California Assembly, Judiciary Subcommittee on Sex Research, Sacramento, California, March 1952. <Number of pages?>
  
Ellis, Havelock, and Symonds, John Addington. Sexual Inversion. 1st English ed. London: Wilson and Macmillan, 1897; photo reprint, N.¥.: Arno, 1975· (P. 73.)  
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 +
Bowman, Karl M., and Engle, Bernice. "The Problem of Homosexuality," ''Journal of Social Hygiene (New York).'' Vol. 39, no. I (1953): p. 2-16. (P. 10-11.)  
  
  
Ellis, Havelock, and Talbot, E. S. See Talbot and Ellis.  
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Brill, A. A. "The Conception of Homosexuality," ''Journal of the American Medical Association'' (Chicago). Vol. 61 (Aug. 2, 1913): p. 335-40.
  
  
"Fatal Emetine Poisoning from Aversion Treatment," Re W. T. (Westminster Inquest, Feb. 7, 1964), ''Medico-Legal Journal,'' vol. 32, no. 2 (1964), page 95. Cited in Weinberg and Bell, ''Homosexuality'' (1972), page 287.
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Brill, A. A. "The Psychiatric Approach to the Problem of Homosexuality," ''Psychiatric Association and Student Health Association'', vol. 15 (1934), p. 31-34; reprinted in ''Journal Lancet,'' vol. 55 (1935), p. 249-52.  
:Describes the death of  a patient undergoing aversion treatment for homosexuality.
 
  
  
Freud, Sigmund. "The Psychogenesis of a Case of Female Homosexuality," International Journal of Psycho-Analysis. Vol. I, no. 2 (1920): p. 125-49. (P. 125-27, 129-30, 131, 133, 134,135,136,141-42,144,148-49.)  
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Brody, Morris Wolfe. "An Analysis of the Psychosexual Development of a Female: With Special Reference to Homosexuality," ''Psychoanalytic Review'', vol. 30, no. I (1943), p. 47-58; reprinted as "Psychosexual Development of a Female" in ''The Homosexuals As Seen By Themselves and Thirty Authorities'', ed. A. M. Krich, p. 312-24 (N.Y.: Citadel, 1954)·
  
  
Friedlander, Joseph, and Banay, Ralph S. "Psychosis Following Lobotomy in a Case of Sexual Psychopathology; Report of a Case," Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry. Vol. 59 (1948): p. 302-21. (P. 303-11, 315, 321.)
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Buck, W. D. "A Raid on the Uterus," ''New York Medical Journal'', vol. 5 (August 1866), p. 464. In an extract from an address in 1866 by Dr. W. D. Buck, President of the New Hampshire State Medical Society, the doctor says: "A distinguished surgeon in New York city, twenty-five years ago [1841], said, when [Guillaume] Dupuytren's operation for relaxation of the sphincter ani was in vogue, every young man who came from Paris found every other individual's anus too large, and proceeded to pucker it up. The result was that New York anuses looked like gimlet-holes in a piece of pork." Buck goes on to say that the uterus, also, is being subjected to "surgical operations, and is now-a-days subject to all sorts of barbarity from surgeons anxious for notoriety." His statement, which bears further analysis, seems aimed at primitive abortion and birth control measures. A brief biography of Dupuytren is in John Talbott, A Biographical History of Medicine (N.Y.: Grune & Stratton, 1970), p. 342-44. Jonathan Ned Katz thanks Stephen W. Foster and Dennis Lampkowski for help with this research.  
  
  
"The Gentleman Degenerate. A Homosexualist's Self-Description and Self-Applied Title.
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Bullough, Vern L., and Martha Voght. "Homosexuality and the 'Secret Sin' in Pre-Freudian America," ''Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences'', vol. 28, no. 2 (April 1973), p. 143-55. Surgical measures for masturbation, satyriasis, etc., are cited.
Pudic Nerve Section Fails Therapeutically," Alienist and Neurologist. Vol. 2$, no. I (Feb. I, 1904): p. 62-70. (P. 68-70.)
+
  
 +
Caprio, Frank S. ''Female Homosexuality; A Psychodynamic Study of Lesbianism.'' Foreword by Karl M. Bowman. N.Y.: Grove Press, Evergreen Black Cat, 1962.
  
Glass, S. J., and Johnson, Roswell, H. "Limitations and Complications of Organotherapy in Male Homosexuality," Journal of Clinical Endocrinology. Vol. 4, no. I I (1944): p. 540--44. (P. 541-43·)
 
  
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Cautela, Joseph R. "Covert Sensitization," Psychological Reports (Missoula, Montana). Vol. 20, no. 2 (1967): p. 459-68.
  
Hadden, Samuel B. "Attitudes Toward and Approaches to the Problem of Homosexuality," Pennsylvania Medical Journal. Vol. 6, no. 9 (1957): p. 1195-98.
 
  
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Cave, F. C. "Report of Sterilization in the Kansas State Home for Feeble-minded," ''Journal of PsychoAsthenics'', vol. 15 [1911], p. 123-25; cited in Arno Karlen, ''Sexuality and Homosexuality; A New View'' (N.Y.: Norton, 1971), p. 332. In the mid-1890s, F. Hoyt Pilcher, the head of a Kansas institution for the feebleminded, had four boys and fourteen girls castrated without legal authority. It was explained in his defense that castration would prevent "excessive masturbation and pervert [sic] sexual acts". Public outcry stopped further castration.
  
Harms, Ernest. "Homo-Anonymous," Diseases of the Nervous System. Vol. 14, no. 10 (1953): p. 318-19.
 
  
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Chicago Gay Liberation Front, "A Leaflet for the American Medical Association," (1970), reprinted in ''Out of the Closets; Voice of Gay Liberation'', eds. Karla Jay and Allen Young (N.Y.: Douglass, 1972), p. 145-47.
  
Henry, George W. Sex Variants; A Study of Homosexual Patterns. 2 vols. N.Y.: Paul B.
 
Hoeber, 1941.
 
  
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Chideckel, Maurice. Female Sex Perversion. N.Y.: Eugenics Pub. Co., 1938.
  
Hirschfeld, Magnus. "Adaptionsbehandlung (Anpassungstherapie) der HomosexualiHit." Trans.
 
Henry Gerber from Die Homosexualitiit des Mannes und des Weibes, 2nd ed. (Berlin, 1920): chap. 23, p. 439-61. In ONE Institute Quarterly. Vol. 5, nos. 2, 3, 4, issues 17 (Spring, Summer, Fall 1962): p. 41-54· (P. 41-46, 49-51, 54.)
 
  
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Coriat, Isador. "Homosexuality. Its Psychogenesis and Treatment," ''New York Medical Journal'', vol. 97, no. 12 (March 22, 1913), pages 589-94.
  
Hughes, Charles H. "An Emasculated Homo-sexual. His Antecedent and Post-Operative Life," ''Alienist and Neurologist''. Vol. 35 (1914): p. 277-80.
 
  
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Cory, Donald Webster (pseudonym of Edward Sagarin). "Can Homosexuality Be Cured?," ''Sexology'', vol. 18 (Oct. 1951), p. 146-56. An important early American homosexual emancipation movement statement.
  
Institute for Sex Research. Mimeographed bibliographies on "Homosexuality-Aversion and Behavior Therapy" (Nov. 1972) and "Homosexuality Therapy: Pre-1940" (May 1974)·
 
  
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Cory, Donald Webster (pseudonym of Edward Sagarin). "Homosexuality," in ''The Encyclopedia of Sexual Behavior,'' eds. Albert Ellis and Albert Abarbanel, p. 485-93, 2nd rev. ed. (N.Y.: Hawthorn, 1967).
  
Kaye, Harvey E.; Berl, S.; Clare, J.; Eleston, M. R.; Gershwin, B. S.; Gershwin, P.; Kogan, S.; Torda, c.; and Wilbur, C. B. "Homosexuality in Women," Archives of General Psychiatry. Vol. 17 (Nov. 1967): p. 626-34. (P. 626, 632-34.)
 
  
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Cory, Donald Webster (pseudonym of Edward Sagarin), and John P. LeRoy, pseud., "Why Homosexuals Resist Cure," ''Sexology'', vol. 30, no. 7 (1964), p. 480-82. An early homosexual emancipationist statement.
  
Kiernan, James G. "Insanity. Lecture XXVI.-Perversion," ''Detroit Lancet''. Vol. 7, no. II (May 1884): p. 481-84. (P. 483-84.)
 
  
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"Criminal Law, Sex Offenders, Civil Commitment for Psychiatric Treatment," Columbia Law Review, vol. 39 (1939), p. 534-44;
  
Kiernan, James G. "Psychical Treatment of Congenital Sexual Inversion," ''Review of Insanity and Nervous Disease'' (Milwaukee, Wisconsin). Vol. 4, no. 4 (June 1894): p. 293-95·
 
  
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Daniel, F. E. "Castration of Sexual Perverts," ''Texas Medical Journa''l (Austin), Aug. 1893: 255-71. Reprinted in ''Texas Medical Journal''. Vol. 27, no. 10 (April 1912): p. 369-85· A note (p. 369) adds: "Under the title, 'Should Insane Criminals or Sexual Perverts be Permitted to Procreate?' this paper was read at the Joint Session of the World's Columbian Auxiliary Congress--Section of Medical Jurisprudence--and the International Medico-Legal Congress, August 16th, 1893, and also before the American Medico-Legal Society, New York, October 11th, 1893, and published in the 'Medico-Legal Journal' for December, and in the 'Psychological Bulletin,' New York." Dr. Daniel is identified in the 1912 reprint as the editor of the ''Texas Medical Journal''.
  
Klaich, Dolores. ''Woman + Woman; Attitudes Toward Lesbianism.'' N.Y.: Morrow, 1975, paperback. (P. 100-01.)
 
  
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Deutsch, Helene. "On Female Homosexuality," authorized trans. by Edith B. Jackson, Psychoanalytic Quarterly (New York). Vol. I (Oct. 1932): p. 484-510. A second trans.: "Homosexuality in Women,"'' International Journal of Psychoanalysis'' (London), Vol. 14 (1933): p. 34-56.
  
Liebman, Samuel. "Homosexuality, Transvestism, and Psychosis: Study of a Case Treated with Electroshock," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. Vol. 99, no. 6 (1944): p. 945-58.
 
  
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Deutsch, Nicholas. Interviewed by Jonathan Katz. New York City, Oct. 17, 1974. Quoted in {{GAH}}.
  
LoPiccolo, Joseph. "Case Study: Systematic Desensitization of Homosexuality," Behavior Therapy. Vol. 2, no. 3 (July 1971): p. 394-99· (P. 396-98.)
 
  
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Doyle, Thomas L. "Homosexuality and Its Treatment," ''Nursing Outlook'', vol. 15, no. 8 (1967), p. 38-40. Includes treatment of lesbians.
  
Lydston, G. Frank. "Sexual Perversion, Satyriasis and Nymphomania," ''Medical and Surgical Reporter'' (Philadelphia). Vol. 61, no. 10 (Sept. 7,1889): p. 253-58; Vol. 61, no. II (Sept. 14, 1889): 281-85.
 
:a lecture delivered at the Chicago College of Physicians and Surgeons. Although he discusses male and female homosexuality, Lydston makes no specific recommendation for treatment. But since he links homosexuality with satyriasis and nymphomania, there is an unspoken suggestion that it should be similarly treated; for the two "perversions" of which he speaks Lydston suggests "removal of irritation of the sexual apparatus," "anaphrodisiac remedies," "attempts to restrain sexual excesses, or to break the habit of masturbation." But if the "disease" is organic, it is probably incurable and requires more radical treatment: "In women, extirpation of the ovaries, or the procedure of Mr. Baker Brown--clitoridectomy--may be performed. Howe recommends the application of the actual cautery to the back of the neck. Basing this treatment upon the theory that the disease takes its origin in over-excitation of the nerve fibres of the cerebellum or some of the ganglia in the neighborhood, he also suggests blisters and setons to answer the same purpose. Dry cupping to the nucha is also serviceable. Means to restore the general health are always indicated. In the severe cases of the maniacal form of excessive sexual desire the asylum is usually our only recourse".
 
  
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Ellis, Albert. "The Effectiveness of Psychotherapy with Individuals Who Have Severe Homosexual Problems"  Journal of Consulting Psychology, vol. 20 (1956), p. 191-95 (28 males, 12 females), reprinted in ''The Problem of Homosexuality in Modern Society,'' ed. Hendrik M. Ruitenbeek, p. 175-82 (N.Y.: Dutton, 1963); and Albert Ellis, "The Use of Psychotherapy with Homosexuals" (41 males, 12 females), ''Mattachine Review'', vol. 2, no. I (1956), p. 14-16.
  
Max, Louis William. "Breaking Up a Homosexual Fixation by the Conditioned Reaction Technique: A Case Study," Psychological Bulletin. Vol. 32 (1935): p. 734·
 
  
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Ellis, Albert. "New Hope for Homosexuals," <original publication data? 1958>, reprinted in ''The Third Sex'', ed. Isadore Rubin, p. 53-57 (N.Y.: New Book Co., 1961) .
  
Miller, Michael M. "Hypnotic-Aversion Treatment of Homosexuality," Journal of the National Medical Association. Vol. 55, no. 5 (1963): p. 4II-15, 436. (P. 4II-13, 415.)
 
  
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Ellis, Havelock. "A Note on the Treatment of Sexual Inversion," ''Alienist and Neurologist'' (St. Louis, Missouri). Vol. 17 (July 1896): p. 257-64.
  
Moore, Thomas V. "The Pathogenesis and Treatment of Homosexual Disorders: A Digest of Some Pertinent Evidence," Journal of Personality. Vol. 14 (1945): p. 47-83. (P. 57, 71-73.)
 
  
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Ellis, Havelock. "Sexual Inversion in Women," ''Alienist and Neurologist'' (St. Louis, Missour)i. Vol. 16, no. 2 (April 1895): 141-58.
  
Owensby, Newdigate M. 'The Correction of Homosexuality," Urologic and Cutaneous Review. Vol. 45, no. 8 (1941): p. 494-96. (P. 495,496.)
 
  
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Ellis, Havelock, and Symonds, John Addington. ''Sexual Inversion.'' 1st English ed. London: Wilson and Macmillan, 1897; photo reprint, N.¥.: Arno, 1975· (P. 73.)
  
---. "Homosexuality and Lesbianism Treated with Metrazol," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. Vol. 92, no. I (1940): p. 65-66.
 
  
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Ellis, Havelock, and Talbot, E. S. See Talbot and Ellis.
  
Quackenbos, John Duncan. "Hypnotic Suggestion in the Treatment of Sexual Perversions and Moral Anaesthesia: A Personal Experience," Transactions of the New Hampshire Medical Society. 1899: p. 69-91. (P. 69, 72, 75, 78-80.)
 
  
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"Fatal Emetine Poisoning from Aversion Treatment," Re W. T. (Westminster Inquest, Feb. 7, 1964), ''Medico-Legal Journal,'' vol. 32, no. 2 (1964), page 95. Cited in Weinberg and Bell, ''Homosexuality'' (1972), page 287. Describes the death of  a patient undergoing aversion treatment for homosexuality.
  
Raffalovich, Marc Andre. "Uranism, Congenital Sexual Inversion. Observations and Recommendations ... " Trans. C. Judson Herrick. Journal of Comparative Neurology. Vol. 5 (March 1895): p. 33-65. (P. 33-34,36-37,42,52.)
 
  
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Fluckiger, Fritz A. "Research Through a Glass Darkly: An Evaluation of the Bieber Study on Homosexuality," privately printed, 1966. An early homosexual emancipation statement.
  
"Removal of the Ovaries as a Therapeutic Measure in Public Institutions for the Insane," ''Journal of the American Medical Association'' (Chicago), Feb. 4, 1893, p. 135-37.
 
:There may be an earlier article on this in January. Dr. Joseph Price mentioned: p. 136-37. Also see "Domestic Correspondence," same, Feb. 18, 1893, p. 182-83. For comment on this article see Dr. F. E. Daniel (1893) on OutHistory.org.
 
  
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Frank, Jerome D.  "Treatment of Homosexuals," Working Paper Prepared for the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Homosexuality, mimeographed. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University, 1967, 13 p.
  
Robertiello, Richard C. Voyage from Lesbos: The Psychoanalysis of a Female Homosexual. N.¥.: Citadel, 1959. (P. 238-48, 253.)
 
  
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Freud, Signmund. "Letter to an American Mother" (April 9, 1935).  ''American Journal of Psychiatry'', vol. 107 (1951), p. 786-87; various reprints.
  
Rosenzweig, Saul, and Hoskins, R. G. "A Note on the Ineffectualness of Sex-Hormone Medication in a Case of Pronounced Homosexuality," Psychosomatic Medicine. Vol. 3, no. 1 (1941): p.87-89·
 
  
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Freud, Sigmund. "The Psychogenesis of a Case of Female Homosexuality," ''International Journal of Psycho-Analysis'' (London). Vol. I, no. 2 (1920): pages 125-49. (On treatment: pages 125-27, 129-30, 131, 133, 134,135, 136, 141-42, 144, 148-49.)
  
Roueche, Berton. "Annals of Medicine; As Empty As Eve," The New Yorker. Sept. 9, 1974: p.84-100.
 
  
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Friedlander, Joseph, and Banay, Ralph S. "Psychosis Following Lobotomy in a Case of Sexual Psychopathology; Report of a Case," ''Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry'' (Chicago). Vol. 59 (1948): p. 302-21.
  
Rutner, Ivan I. "A Double-barrel Approach to Modification of Homosexual Behavior," Psychological Reports. Vol. 26, no. 2 (1970): p. 355-58. (P. 356-58.)
 
  
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"Gentleman Degenerate, The. A Homosexualist's Self-Description and Self-Applied Title. Pudic Nerve Section Fails Therapeutically," ''Alienist and Neurologist'' (St. Louis, Missouri). Vol. 2$, no. I (Feb. I, 1904): p. 62-70. The editor of this journal, Dr. Charles H. Hughes of St. Louis, may be the anonymous physician-author of this piece. 
  
Schrenck-Notzing, Albert von. ''Therapeutic Suggestion in Psychopathia Sexualis with Especial Reference to Contrary Sexual Instinct.'' Authorized trans. from the German by Charles Gilbert Chaddock. Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1895.
 
  
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Gilbert,  J. A. "Homosexuality and Its Treatment." ''Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease'' (Lancaster, Pennsylvania), vol. 52, No. 4 (Oct. 1920), pages 297-322 (life of Alberta Lucile/Alan Hart; reproduced in {{GAH}}, Part III, Passing Women, and on OutHIstory.org.
  
Sharp, Harry Clay. "The Sterilization of Degenerates." Indiana Board of State Charities. National Christian League for the Promotion of Purity, 1908. (P. 1-2, 6.) Reprint of paper read before the American Prison Association, Chicago, 1909. N.Y. Public Library, Research Division.
 
  
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Glass, S. J., and Johnson, Roswell, H. "Limitations and Complications of Organotherapy in Male Homosexuality," Journal of Clinical Endocrinology (Philadelphia). Vol. 4, no. I I (1944): p. 540--44.
  
Silverstein, Charles. [Review of John Bancroft's Deviant Sexual Behavior: Modification and Assessment. London: Oxford University Press, 1974.] Behavior Therapy. Vol. 6, no. 4 (July 1975)·
 
  
 +
Golden, Joshua S. "Varieties of Sexual Problems in Obstetrical and Gynecological Practice," in'' Sexual Problems: Diagnosis and Treatment in Medical Practice'', ed. Charles William Wahl (New York: Free Press, 1967), p. 53-61. Lesbian references.
  
Smith, Alexander B., and Bassin, Alexander. "Group Therapy with Homosexuals," Journal of Social Therapy. Vol. 5, no. 3 (1959): p. 225-32. (P. 227, 231-32.)
 
  
 +
Goodell, C. E. "Sexual Perversion, Its Effects and Its Treatment," ''Medical Era'' (St. Louis, Missour), vol. 19 (1910), pages 499-502.
  
Smec, J., and Freund, Kurt. "Treatment of Male Homosexuality through Conditioning," International Journal of Sexology. Vol. 7, no. 2 (1953): p. 92-93.
 
  
 +
Goodell, C. E. "Suggestive Therapy in Sexual Perversion," ''American Journal of Dermatology and Genito-Urinary Disease'' (St. Louis, Missouri), vol. 8 (1904), p. 104-06.
  
Stekel, Wilhelm. "Is Homosexuality Curable?" Trans. Bertrand S. Frohman. Psychoanalytic Review. Vol. 17 (Oct. 1930): p. 443-51. (P. 443, 447-48.)
 
  
 +
Hackfield, A. W. "Ameliorative Effects of Therapeutic Castration on Habitual Sex Offenders," ''Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease'', vol. 82, no. I (July 1935), p. 15-29; no. 2 (Aug. 1935), p. 169-81.
  
Stevenson, Edward I. Prime (Xavier Mayne, pseud.). The Intersexes; A History of Similisexualism as a Problem in Social Life. [Naples?:] Privately printed, [by R. Rispoli, 1908?]; photo reprint, N.Y.: Amo, 1975. (P. II9-22, 549.)
 
  
 +
Hadden, Samuel B. "Attitudes Toward and Approaches to the Problem of Homosexuality," ''Pennsylvania Medical Journal'' (Lemoyne, Pennsylvania). Vol. 6, no. 9 (1957): p. 1195-98.
  
Talbot, E. S., and Ellis, Havelock. "A Case of Degenerative Insanity, with Sexual Inversion, Melancholia, following Removal of Testicles, Attempted Murder and Suicide," Journal of Mental Science. Vol. 42, no. 177, new ser. no. 177 (April 1896): p. 340-44 (Le. 46-erroneous pagination in original). (P. 341-44.)
 
  
 +
Harms, Ernest. "Homo-Anonymous," ''Diseases of the Nervous System'' (Memphis, Tennessee). Vol. 14, no. 10 (1953): pages 318-19.
  
Weinberg, Martin S. and Alan P. Bell, ''Homosexuality; An Annotated Bibliography'' (N.Y.: Harper and Row, 1972).
 
:Bibliography of the medical and psychological literature.
 
  
 +
Henry, George W. ''Essentials of Psychiatry''. Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1938.
  
  
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
+
Henry, George W. ''Sex Variants; A Study of Homosexual Patterns.'' 2 vols. N.Y.: Paul B. Hoeber, 1941.
  
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
 
TO BE INTEGRATED
 
  
This section includes the Bibliography and the Backnotes from the section on Treatment in {{GAH}, pages 589-599. In the acknowledgements in that section, Katz thanks "ames D. Steakley for his help in compiling this part, and for writing a first draft of the general introduction and introductions to the documents. Responsibility for the final versions is my own."  
+
Hirschfeld, Magnus. "Adaptionsbehandlung (Anpassungstherapie) der HomosexualiHit." This chapter appears in the first, 1914, German edition. Translation by Henry Gerber from ''Die Homosexualitiit des Mannes und des Weibes'', 2nd ed. (Berlin: Louis Marcus, 1920): chap. 23, pages. 439-61, in ''ONE Institute Quarterly'' (Los Angeles),  vol. 5, nos. 2, 3, 4, issues 17 (Spring, Summer, Fall 1962): p. 41-54. Translation by Richard Plant in {{GAH}}, "Treatment."
  
  
I. Various treatment types are documented in this section of Gay American History and the notes.  
+
Hobson, Christopher Z. (writing as James Coleman, pseud.), "Surviving Psychotherapy," ''Radical Therapy'', vol. 2, no. 2 (Sept. 1971), reprinted in Jay and Young (above), p. 147-53.
  
Hysterectomy Part 3, "Passing Women," p. 276, 606n. 69.
 
  
 +
Hooker, Evelyn, and others, "Final Report of the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Homosexuality," reprinted in SIECUS Newsletter (Dec. 1970).
  
UP TO HERE
 
  
Surgical measures for masturbation, satyriasis, etc., are cited by  G. J. Barker-Benfield, The Horrors of the Half-Known Life; Male Attitudes Toward Women and Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century America (N.Y.: Harper & Row, 1976), on sexual surgery, p. 82-83, 88-90,91 iI., 97, 104, 120-32,286-87,292-93. Also see note 5 below.
+
Hughes, Charles H. "An Emasculated Homo-sexual. His Antecedent and Post-Operative Life," ''Alienist and Neurologist''. Vol. 35 (1914): p. 277-80.  
  
  
 +
Institute for Sex Research. Mimeographed bibliographies on "Homosexuality-Aversion and Behavior Therapy" (Nov. 1972) and "Homosexuality Therapy: Pre-1940" (May 1974)·
  
The Weinberg and Bell bibliography contains a large, useful, alphabetical, annotated listing of books and articles dating from 1940 to 1968 on the treatment of homosexuals. The index provides a guide to types of treatment, and the introduction lists the various indexes and guides used in the compilation.
 
  
 +
Kahn, Samuel. ''A Study of Homosexuals and Their Education in the New York Correction Hospitals.'' M. A. thesis, New York University School of Education, 1923, 149 p.
  
Documents on various treatment forms through 1969 are listed and indexed in William Parker, Homosexuality; A Selective Bibliography of Over 3.000 Items (Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1971).
 
  
 +
Kameny, Franklin E. "Gay Liberation and Psychiatry." ''Psychiatric Opinion'', vol. 8, no. I (Feb. 1971), p. 18-27, reprinted in ''The Homosexual Dialectic'', ed. Joseph A. McCaffrey (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1972), pages <???-???>
  
The Institute for Sex Research provided mimeographed bibliographies on "Homosexuality-Aversion and Behavior Therapy" (Nov. 1972) and "Homosexuality Therapy: Pre-1940" (May 1974)·
 
  
 +
Katz, Jonathan Ned. "Treatment" (including Bibliography and Notes), in ''Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A.'' (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1976.
  
 
  
 +
Kaye, Harvey E.; Berl, S.; Clare, J.; Eleston, M. R.; Gershwin, B. S.; Gershwin, P.; Kogan, S.; Torda, c.; and Wilbur, C. B. "Homosexuality in Women," ''Archives of General Psychiatry'' (Chicago). Vol. 17 (Nov. 1967): p. 626-34.
  
  
Material on treatment of homosexuality is in R. von Krafft-Ebing's Psychopathia Sexualis, with Special Reference to Contrary Sexual Instinct. A Medico-Legal Study. Authorized trans. of the 7th enlarged and rev. German ed. by Charles Gilbert Chaddock (Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1893).  
+
Kemph, John P. and Erna Schwerin, "Increased Latent Homosexuality in a Woman During Group Therapy," ''International Journal of Group Psychotherapy'', vol. 16, no. 2 (1966), pages 217-24.  
  
  
8. Marc Andre Raffalovich, "Uranism, Congenital Sexual Inversion. Observations and Recommendations ... " trans. C. Judson Herrick, Journal of Comparative Neurology (Granville, Ohio), vol. 5 (March 1895), p. 33-34, 36-37, 42, 52. Background on Raffalovich is in Timothy d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest; Some Notes on the Lives and Writings of English 'Uranian' Poets from 1889 to 1930 (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1970), p. 29-34, 53, 77, 107, 153, 186, 249 and Brian Reade, ed., Sexual Heretics; Male Homosexuality in English Literature from 1850 to 1900 (N.Y.: CowardMcCann, 1970,P· 32-35, 38,40,50, 53)·
+
Kiernan, James G. "Insanity. Lecture XXVI.-Perversion," ''Detroit Lancet''. Vol. 7, no. II (May 1884): p. 481-84. (P. 483-84.)
  
 
9. Havelock Ellis, "Sexual Inversion in Women," Alienist and Neurologist (St. Louis, Mo.), vol. 16, no. 2 (April 1895), p. 158.
 
  
See also: Havelock Ellis, "A Note on the Treatment of Sexual Inversion," Alienist and Neurologist (St. Louis, Mo.), vol. I7 (July 1896), p. 258-59.
+
Kiernan, James G. "Psychical Treatment of Congenital Sexual Inversion," ''Review of Insanity and Nervous Disease'' (Milwaukee, Wisconsin). Vol. 4, no. 4 (June 1894): p. 293-95·
  
  
In the mid-1890s, F. Hoyt Pilcher, the head of a Kansas institution for the feebleminded, had four boys and fourteen girls castrated without legal authority. It was explained in his defense that castration would prevent "excessive masturbation and pervert [sic] sexual acts". Public outcry stopped further castration (F. C. Cave, "Report of Sterilization in the Kansas State Home for Feeble-minded," Journal of PsychoAsthenics, vol. 15 [1911], p. 123-25; Arno Karlen, Sexuality and Homosexuality; A New View [N.Y.: Norton, 1971], p. 332).
+
Klaich, Dolores. ''Woman + Woman; Attitudes Toward Lesbianism.'' N.Y.: Morrow, 1975, paperback. (P. 100-01.)  
  
  
+
Kopp, Marie E. "Surgical Treatment as Sex Crime Prevention Measure." ''Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology,'' vol. 28 (Jan.-Feb. 1938), p. 687, etc. <pages ?> Says that between 1889 and 1907 Dr. Sharp of the State Reformatory for Delinquent Boys at Jefferson, Indiana, performed "several hundred" vasectomies.
10. E. S. Talbot and Havelock Ellis, "A Case of Developmental Degenerative Insanity, with Sexual Inversion, Melancholia, Following Removal of Testicles, Attempted Murder and Suicide," Journal of Mental Science (London), vol. 42, no. 177, new ser., no. 141 (April 1896), p. 341-44 (i.e., 46-erroneous pagination in original);
 
  
Havelock Ellis, and John Addington Symonds, Sexual Inversion (London: Wilson and Macmillan, 1897: photo reprint, N.Y.: Arno, 1975), p. 73.
 
  
 +
Krafft-Ebing, R. von. ''Psychopathia Sexualis, with Special Reference to Contrary Sexual Instinct. A Medico-Legal Study.'' Authorized trans. of the 7th enlarged and rev. German ed. by Charles Gilbert Chaddock (Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1893). Material on treatment of contrary sexual instinct.
  
I I. Harry Clay Sharp, "The Sterilization of Degenerates," Indiana Board of State Charities (National Christian League for Promotion of Purity, 1908), p. 1-2,6. Reprint of a paper read before the American Prison Association, Chicago, 1909 (in the N.Y. Public Library Research Division). Also see Sharp, "Human Sterilization," Journal of the American Medical Association, vol. 4, no. 12 (1909). In a paper titled "Surgical Treatment as Sex Crime Prevention Measure," Marie E. Kopp says that between 1889 and 1907 Dr. Sharp of the State Reformatory for Delinquent Boys at Jefferson, Indiana, performed "several hundred" vasectomies (Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, vol. 28 [Jan.-Feb. 1938], p. 687).
 
  
 +
Krafft-Ebing, R. von. ''Text Book of Insanity'' (Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1904).
  
12. John Duncan Quackenbos, "Hypnotic Suggestion in the Treatment of Sexual Perversions and Moral Anaesthesia: A Personal Experience," Transactions of the New Hampshire Medical Society (Concord), 1899, p. 69,72,75,78-80.
 
  
 +
Krich, A. M., ed. ''The Homosexuals As Seen by Themselves and Thirty Authorities''. (N.Y.: Citadel, 1954).
  
13. "The Gentleman Degenerate. A Homosexualist's Self-Description and SelfApplied Title. Pudic Nerve Section Fails Therapeutically," Alienist and Neurologist (St. Louis, Mo.), vol. 25, no. I (Feb. I, 1904), p. 68-70. The editor of this journal, Dr. Charles H. Hughes of St. Louis, may be the anonymous physician-author of this piece.
 
  
 +
Labelle, Maurice. "Laws Need to Force 'Homos' to Seek Help." ''Coral Gable Times'' (Florida), Feb. 4, 1965, p. 6, 8.
  
See also R. von Krafft-Ebing, Text Book of Insanity (Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1904);
 
  
 +
Liebman, Samuel. "Homosexuality, Transvestism, and Psychosis: Study of a Case Treated with Electroshock,"'' Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease'' (New York). Vol. 99, no. 6 (1944): p. 945-58.
  
E. Goodell, "Suggestive Therapy in Sexual Perversion," American Journal of Dermatology and Genito-Urinary Disease (St. Louis, Mo.), vol. 8 (1904), p. 104-06.
 
  
 +
Lind, Earl (Ralph Werther/Jennie June). ''Autobiography of an Androgyne,'' ed. with an intro. by Alfred W. Herzog (N.Y.: MedicoLegal Press, 1918; photo reprint, N.Y.: Arno, 1975). On his castration: pages 41-42, 74, 197-201, 230. On OutHistory.org see Earl Lind.
  
14. Edward I. Prime Stevenson (Xavier Mayne, pseud.), The Intersexes; A History of
 
  
 +
Lind, Earl (Ralph Werther/Jennie June). ''The Female Impersonators...'' , ed. with intro. by Alfred W. Herzog (N.Y.: Medico-Legal Press, 1922; photo reprint, N.Y.: Arno, 1975). On his castration: pages. 16, 67. On OutHistory.org, see Earl Lind.
  
PAGE 592
 
Similisexualism as a Problem in Social Life ([Naples?:] Privately printed [R. Rispoli, 1908?]; photo reprint, N.Y.: Arno, 1975), p. 119-22,549.
 
  
See also C. E. Goodell, "Sexual Perversion, Its Effects and Its Treatment," Medical Era (St. Louis, Mo.), vol. 19 (1910), p. 499-502; G. F. Lydston, "Sex Mutilations in Social Therapeutics, With Some of the Difficulties in the Application of Eugenics to the Human Race," New York Medical Journal, April 6, 1912.
+
LoPiccolo, Joseph. "Case Study: Systematic Desensitization of Homosexuality," Behavior Therapy. Vol. 2, no. 3 (July 1971): p. 394-99· (P. 396-98.)
 
 
 
 
15. A. A. Brill, "The Conception of Homosexuality," Journal of the American Medical Association (Chicago), vol. 61 (Aug. 2, 1913), p. 335-40. Footnotes omitted.  
 
  
  
See also Isador Coriat, "Homosexuality. Its Psychogenesis and Treatment," New York Medical Journal, vol. 97, no. 12 (March 22,1913), p. 589-94.  
+
Lydston, G. Frank. "Sex Mutilations in Social Therapeutics, With Some of the Difficulties in the Application of Eugenics to the Human Race," ''New York Medical Journal'', April 6, 1912, pages ???-???.
  
  
16. Magnus Hirschfeld, "Adaptionsbehandlung (Anpassungstherapie) der Homosexualitiit," ch. 23, p. 439-61 in Die Homosexualitiit des Mannes und des Weibes, 2nd ed. (Berlin: Louis Marcus, 1920). The same chapter appears in the first, 19 I 4, edition. I wish to thank Richard Plant for this translation.
+
Lydston, G. Frank. "Sexual Perversion, Satyriasis and Nymphomania," ''Medical and Surgical Reporter'' (Philadelphia). Vol. 61, no. 10 (Sept. 7,1889): p. 253-58; Vol. 61, no. II (Sept. 14, 1889): 281-85.  A lecture delivered at the Chicago College of Physicians and Surgeons. Although he discusses male and female homosexuality, Lydston makes no specific recommendation for treatment. But since he links homosexuality with satyriasis and nymphomania, there is an unspoken suggestion that it should be similarly treated; for the two "perversions" of which he speaks Lydston suggests "removal of irritation of the sexual apparatus," "anaphrodisiac remedies," "attempts to restrain sexual excesses, or to break the habit of masturbation." But if the "disease" is organic, it is probably incurable and requires more radical treatment: "In women, extirpation of the ovaries, or the procedure of Mr. Baker Brown--clitoridectomy--may be performed. Howe recommends the application of the actual cautery to the back of the neck. Basing this treatment upon the theory that the disease takes its origin in over-excitation of the nerve fibres of the cerebellum or some of the ganglia in the neighborhood, he also suggests blisters and setons to answer the same purpose. Dry cupping to the nucha is also serviceable. Means to restore the general health are always indicated. In the severe cases of the maniacal form of excessive sexual desire the asylum is usually our only recourse".
  
Another translation, by Henry Gerber, the American homosexual rights pioneer, appears in ONE Institute Quarterly (Los Angeles), vol. 5, nos. 2-3-4, issue I? (Spring, Summer, Fall 1962). For the works of Alexander von Gleichen-Russwurm, f:lisar von Kupffer, and Edward Carpenter see part VI, note 10.
 
  
 +
Max, Louis William. "Breaking Up a Homosexual Fixation by the Conditioned Reaction Technique: A Case Study," Psychological Bulletin (Washington, D.C.), Vol. 32 (1935): p. 734·
  
I? Charles H. Hughes, "An Emasculated Homo-sexual. His Antecedent and PostOperative Life," Alienist and Neurologist (St. Louis, Mo.), vol. 35 (1914), p. 277-80.
 
  
 +
Mendelsohn, Fred, and Matthew Ross, "An Analysis of 133 Homosexuals Seen at A University Health Service".  ''Diseases of the Nervous System,'' vol. 20, no. 6 (1959), p. 246-50. (109 males, 24 females).
  
See also Emil Oberhoffer, "The Influence of Castration on the Libido," American Journal of Urology and Sexology, vol. 12 (Jan.-Dec. 1916), p. 58-60; Earl Lind, Autobiography of an Androgyne, ed. with an intro. by Alfred W. Herzog (N.Y.: MedicoLegal Press, 1918; photo reprint, N.Y.: Arno, 1975), p. 41-42, 74, 197-201, 230 (on his castration).
 
  
 +
Miller, Michael M. "Hypnotic-Aversion Treatment of Homosexuality," ''Journal of the National Medical Association.'' Vol. 55, no. 5 (1963): p. 411-15, 436. Brief biographical information on Miller is in the ''American Medical Directory'', 24th ed. (1967), part 2, p. 1503.
  
18. Sigmund Freud, "The Psychogenesis of a Case of Female Homosexuality," Inter-
 
national Journal of Psycho-Analysis (London), vol. I, no. 2 (1920), p. 129-30.
 
Freud, p. 125-27.
 
Freud, p. 13 I.
 
Freud, p. 133, 135·
 
Freud, p. 136.
 
Freud, p. 134·
 
Freud, p. 144.
 
Freud, p. 141-42.
 
Freud, p. 148-49.
 
  
 +
''Modern Medicine'' (April 1969, p. 20). According to Blair above (p. 27), a survey reported in Modern Medicine found that only one in four Lesbians interviewed wanted to become heterosexual. <Full citation???>
  
See also Martin W. Barr, "Some Notes on Asexualization; with a Report of Eighteen Cases" (includes references to females) Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (Lancaster, Pa.), vol. 51, no. 3 (March 1920), p. 231-41;
 
  
 +
Moll, Albert. ''Perversions of the Sex Instinct''. Newark, New Jersey: Julian Press, 1931.
  
J. A. Gilbert, "Homosexuality <l;1d Its Treatment," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (Lancaster, Pa.), vol. 52, OJ. 4 (Oct. 1920), p. 297-322 (quoted in Part III, Passing Women);
 
  
Earl Lind, The h'male Impersonators ... , ed. with intro. by Alfred W. Herzog (N.Y.: Medico-Legal f 'ess, 1922; photo reprint, N.Y.: Arno, 1975), p. 16, 67;
+
Moore, Thomas V. "The Pathogenesis and Treatment of Homosexual Disorders: A Digest of Some Pertinent Evidence," Journal of Personality (Durham, North Carolina). Vol. 14 (1945): p. 47-83.
  
  
Samuel Kahn, A Study of l.omosexuals and Their Education in the New York Correction Hospitals, M. A. thesis, N.Y. University School of Education, 1923, 149 p.
+
Oberhoffer, Emil. ''The Influence of Castration on the Libido," ''American Journal of Urology and Sexology'', vol. 12 (Jan.-Dec. 1916), p. 58-60. <Check date of publication and correct if necessary.>
  
  
27. Wilhelm Stekel, "Is Homosexuality Curable?" trans. Bertrand S. Frohman, Psychoanalytic Review, vol. I? (Oct. 1930), p. 443, 447-48.  
+
Owensby, Newdigate M. 'The Correction of Homosexuality," ''Urologic and Cutaneous Review'' (St. Louis, Missouri). Vol. 45, no. 8 (1941): p. 494-96.  
  
See also Albert MoH, Perversions of the Sex Instinct (Newark, N.J.: Julian Press,
 
1931) .
 
  
 +
Owensby, Newdigate. "Homosexuality and Lesbianism Treated with Metrazol," ''Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease'' (New York). Vol. 92, no. I (1940): p. 65-66.
  
28. Helene Deutsch, "On Female Homosexuality," authorized trans. Edith B. Jack-
 
son, Psychoanalytic Quarterly (N.Y.), vol. I (Oct. 1932), p. 484-88,490-91.
 
  
Another translation: "Homosexuality in Women," International Journal of Psychoanalysis (London), vol. 14 (1933), p. 34-56.
+
Parker, William. ''Homosexuality; A Selective Bibliography of Over 3.000 Items'' (Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1971). Documents on various treatment forms through 1969 are listed and indexed.
  
 
PAGE 593
 
29. Nicholas Deutsch, interviewed by Jonathan Katz, N.Y.C., Oct. 17, 1974. Freud's comment is not as unambiguously pro-Gay as it may first appear. Liberal heterosexuals have for long required Gay people to be happy in order to legitimate their homosexual orientation, a psychological obligation experienced by Gay people as a special burden.
 
  
 +
Potter, La Forest. Strange Loves: A Study in Sexual Abnormalities (N.Y.: Robert Dodsley, 1933). On treatment, pages 161-62; 167, 173, 177-78; 118-19; 147; 236-37·
  
30. La Forest Potter, Strange Loves: A Study in Sexual Abnormalities (N.Y.: Robert
 
Dodsley, 1933), p. 161-62.
 
Potter, p. 167, 173, 177-78.
 
Potter, p. 118-19.
 
Potter, p. 147·
 
34· Potter, p. 236-37·
 
  
See also K. Riedner, "Cure of Homosexuals," Sexology (N.Y.), vol. I (1933), p. 490-92;
+
Quackenbos, John Duncan. "Hypnotic Suggestion in the Treatment of Sexual Perversions and Moral Anaesthesia: A Personal Experience," ''Transactions of the New Hampshire Medical Society'' (Concord), 1899: pages 69-91.  
  
Ernest Bien, "Why Do Homosexuals Undergo Treatment?," Anthropos (N.Y.), vol. I, no. I (Jan. 1934), p. 5-18; also in Medical Review of Reviews, vol. 40, no. I (Jan. 1934), p. 18-51 (includes Lesbian references);
 
  
 +
Radicalesbians Health Collective. "Lesbians and the Health Care System," mimeographed, 1971, reprinted in ''Out of the Closets; Voice of Gay Liberation'', eds. Karla Jay and Allen Young (N.Y.: Douglass, 1972), pages 122-41.
  
A. A. Brill, "The Psychiatric Approach to the Problem of Homosexuality," Psychiatric Association and Student Health Association, vol. 15 (1934), p. 31-34; reprinted in Journal Lancet, vol. 55 (1935), p. 249-52.
 
  
 +
Raffalovich, Marc Andre. "Uranism, Congenital Sexual Inversion. Observations and Recommendations ... " Trans. C. Judson Herrick.'' Journal of Comparative Neurology''. Vol. 5 (March 1895): p. 33-65. Advocates abstinence for homosexuals and heterosexuals. On Raffalovich see Timothy d'Arch Smith, ''Love in Earnest; Some Notes on the Lives and Writings of English 'Uranian' Poets from 1889 to 1930'' (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1970), p. 29-34, 53, 77, 107, 153, 186, 249 and Brian Reade, ed., Sexual Heretics; Male Homosexuality in English Literature from 1850 to 1900 (N.Y.: Coward McCann, 1970), pages 32-35, 38, 40, 50, 53·
  
35. Louis William Max, "Breaking Up a Homosexual Fixation by the Condition Reaction Technique: A Case Study," Psychological Bulletin (Washington, D.C.), vol. 32 (1935), p. 734·
 
  
 +
"Removal of the Ovaries as a Therapeutic Measure in Public Institutions for the Insane," ''Journal of the American Medical Association'' (Chicago), Feb. 4, 1893, p. 135-37.  <There may be an earlier article on this in January.> Dr. Joseph Price mentioned: p. 136-37. Also see "Domestic Correspondence," same, Feb. 18, 1893, p. 182-83. For comment on this article see Dr. F. E. Daniel (1893) on OutHistory.org.
  
See also A. W. Hackfield, "Ameliorative Effects of Therapeutic Castration on Habitual Sex Offenders," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, vol. 82, no. I (July 1935), p. 15-29; no. 2 (Aug. 1935), p. 169-81.
 
  
 +
Riedner, K. "Cure of Homosexuals," ''Sexology'' (New York), vol. I (1933), p. 490-92.
  
On April 9, 1935, Sigmund Freud answered an American mother who had written to him about treating her son's homosexuality:
 
"Letter to An American Mother," American Journal of Psychiatry, vol. 107 (195 I), p. 786-87; various reprints;
 
  
George S. Sprague, "Varieties of Homosexual Manifestations," with discussion by Karl A. Menninger, Isador H. Coriat, Charles I. Lambert, Ernest M. Poate, and S. W. Hartwell, 1935; reprinted in The Homosexuals As Seen by Themselves and Thirty Authorities, ed. A. M. Krich, p. 174-87 (N.Y.: Citadel, 1954);
+
Robertiello, Richard C. "Clinical Notes: Results of Separation from Iposexual Parents During the Oedipal Period, [and] A Female Homosexual Panic," ''Psychoanalytic Review'', vol. 51, no. 4 (1964-65), p. 670-72.  
  
  
Marie E. Kopp, "Surgical Treatment as Sex Crime Prevention Measure," Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, vol. 28 (Jan.-Feb. 1938), p. 692-706;
+
Robertiello, Richard C. ''Voyage from Lesbos: The Psychoanalysis of a Female Homosexual''. N.¥.: Citadel, 1959. (P. 238-48, 253.)  
  
George W. Henry, Essentials of Psychiatry (Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1938);
 
  
 +
Robinson, Marty. "Homosexuals & Society: The 'Cure' Is Rebellion," ''Village Voice'' (New York), April 29, 1971.
  
"Criminal Law, Sex Offenders, Civil Commitment for Psychiatric Treatment," Columbia Law Review, vol. 39 (1939), p. 534-44;
 
  
 +
Roman, M. "The Treatment of the Homosexual in the Group," ''Topical Problems in Psychotherapy'', vol. 5 (1965), p. 170-75.
  
Hyman S. Barahal, "Testosterone in Psychotic Male Homosexuals," Psychiatric Quarterly, vol. 14, no. 2 (1940), p. 319-30.
 
  
+
Rosenzweig, Saul, and Hoskins, R. G. "A Note on the Ineffectualness of Sex-Hormone Medication in a Case of Pronounced Homosexuality," ''Psychosomatic Medicine''. Vol. 3, no. 1 (1941): p.87-89·
For additional books and articles on treatment of homosexuality written or translated into English between 1940 and 1968, see Weinberg and Bell. For an additional bibliography on treatment through 1969, see Parker.  
 
  
  
36. Newdigate M. Owensby, "The Correction of Homosexuality," Urologic and Cutaneous Review (St. Louis, Mo.), vol. 45, no. 8 (1941), p. 495.  
+
Roueche, Berton. "Annals of Medicine; As Empty As Eve," ''The New Yorker''. Sept. 9, 1974: p.84-100. Report on a female victim of shock treatment (though not involving homosexuality).
  
  
37. Newdigate M. Owensby, "Homosexuality and Lesbianism Treated with Metrazol," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (N.Y.), vol. 92, no. I (1940), p. 65-66.
+
Rutner, Ivan I. "A Double-barrel Approach to Modification of Homosexual Behavior," ''Psychological Reports'' (Missoula, Montana). Vol. 26, no. 2 (1970): p. 355-58.
Owensby, (1941), p. 496.  
 
  
  
George N. Thompson, "Electroshock and Other Therapeutic Considerations in Sexual Psychopathology," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (N.Y.), vol. 109, no. 6 (June 1949), p. 531-39.  
+
Schrenck-Notzing, Albert von. ''Therapeutic Suggestion in Psychopathia Sexualis with Especial Reference to Contrary Sexual Instinct.'' Authorized trans. from the German by Charles Gilbert Chaddock. Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1895.  
  
  
40. Saul Rosenzweig and R. G. Hoskins, "A Note on the Ineffectualness of SexHormone Medication in a Case of Pronounced Homosexuality," Psychosomatic Medicine (N.Y.), vol. 3, no. I (1941), p. 87-89.  
+
Schur, Edwin M. ''Crimes without Victims; Deviant Behavior and Public Policy: Abortion, Homosexuality, and Drug Addiction'' (Englewood Cliffs, N.Y.: Prentice-Hall, 1965).
  
  
For a relatively rare discussion of Lesbian treatment, see Morris Wolfe Brody, "An Analysis of the Psychosexual Development of a Female: With Special Reference to Homosexuality," Psychoanalytic Review, vol. 30, no. I (1943), p. 47-58; reprinted as
+
Sharp, Harry Clay. "Human Sterilization." ''Journal of the American Medical Association'', vol. 4, no. 12 (1909), pages ???-???.  
  
  
PAGE 594
+
Sharp, Harry Clay. "The Sterilization of Degenerates." Indiana Board of State Charities. National Christian League for the Promotion of Purity, 1908. Reprint of paper read before the American Prison Association, Chicago, 1909. Copy in N.Y. Public Library, Research Division.
"Psychosexual Development of a Female" in The Homosexuals As Seen By Themselves and Thirty Authorities, ed. A. M. Krich, p. 312-24 (N.Y.: Citadel, 1954)·
 
  
41. S. J. Glass and Roswell H. Johnson, "Limitations and Complications of Organotherapy in Male Homosexuality," Journal of Clinical Endocrinology (Phila.), vol. 4, no.
 
II (1944), p. 541-43.
 
  
 +
Silverstein, Charles. [Review of John Bancroft's ''Deviant Sexual Behavior: Modification and Assessment''. London: Oxford University Press, 1974.] ''Behavior Therapy''. Vol. 6, no. 4 (July 1975), pages <???>.
  
42. Samuel Liebman, "Homosexuality, Transvestism, and Psychosis: Study of a
 
Case Treated with Electroshock," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (N.Y.), vol.
 
99,no.6(1944),P·945-47·
 
Liebman, p. 950-53·
 
Liebman, p. 957·
 
  
+
SInclair, Jo (pseudonym of Ruth Seid). ''Wasteland''. New York: Harper, 1946. Novel in which a lesbian who has come to accepting terms with her orientation helps her brother come to terms with his Jewish heritage. See: [[Sinclair (Seid): "Wasteland," 1946]]
Thomas V. Moore, "The Pathogenesis and Treatment of Homosexual Disorders:  
 
A Digest of Some Pertinent Evidence," Journal of Personality (Durham, N.C.), vol. 14 (1945), p. 57. Footnote omitted.
 
Moore, p. 72-73.
 
  
  
Ralph S. Banay and L. Davidoff, "Apparent Recovery of a Sex Psychopath after
+
Smith, Alexander B., and Bassin, Alexander. "Group Therapy with Homosexuals," ''Journal of Social Therapy'' (New York). Vol. 5, no. 3 (1959): p. 225-32.  
Lobotomy," Journal of Criminal Psychopathology (N.Y.), vol. 4, no. I (July 1942), p. 59-66. Here the doctors report that after lobotomy the patient's masturbation stopped, he became "complacent" and "tranquil," and "showed no sign of conflict with his environment." He "remained courteous, meek, obliging and attentive." The doctors conclude that lobotomy "might be a new and important development." A psychological dynamic here, unrecognized by the doctors, is a masochistic subject asking for a lobotomy, and the sadistic physicians obliging.
 
 
 
 
48. Joseph Friedlander and Ralph S. Banay, "Psychosis Following Lobotomy in a Case of Sexual Psychopathology; Report of a Case," Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry (Chicago), vol. 59 (1948), p. 303-11.
 
 
 
 
 
49. Friedlander and Banay, p. 3 15, 321.
 
 
 
 
 
See also Donald Webster Cory, pseud., "Can Homosexuality Be Cured?," Sexology, vol. 18 (Oct. 1951), p. 146-56 (an important early American homosexual emancipation movement statement, not listed in Weinberg and Bell).
 
 
 
 
 
50. J. Srnec and Kurt Freund, "Treatment of Male Homosexuality through Conditioning," International Journal of Sexology (Bombay), vol. 7, no. 2 (1953), p. 92-93.
 
 
 
 
 
51. Karl M. Bowman, "Sexual Deviation Research," California Assembly Judiciary Subcommittee on Sex Research, March 1952.
 
 
 
 
 
52. Karl M. Bowman and Bernice Engle, "The Problem of Homosexuality," Journal of Social Hygiene (N.Y.), vol. 39, no. I (1953), p. 10-11.
 
 
 
 
 
53. Ernest Harms, "Homo-Anonymous," Diseases of the Nervous System (Memphis,
 
Tenn.), vol. 14, no. ro (1953), p. 318-19.
 
 
 
 
 
54. Dolores Klaich, Woman + Woman; Attitudes Toward Lesbianism (N.Y.: Mor-
 
row, 1975), paperback, p. roo-Ol.
 
 
 
 
 
55. Frank S. Caprio, Female Homosexuality; A Psychodynamic Study of Lesbianism, Foreword Karl M. Bowman (N.Y.: Grove Press, Evergreen Black Cat, 1962), p. 299-
 
301, 304.
 
 
 
 
 
See also Harold A. Abramson, "Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD-25), III. As an
 
Adjunct to Psychotherapy with Elimination of Fear of Homosexuality," Journal of Psychology, vol. 39 (Jan. 1955), p. 127-55. Abramson presents a verbatim recording of a four-hour interview with a forty-year-old woman, who under the influence of LSD speaks of her fear of Lesbianism. Abramson was the LSD expert, trusted by the CIA, who in Nov. 1953 twice examined Frank R. Olson-just before he committed suicide as a result of his involuntary participation in a CIA drug experiment (New York Times, July 11,1975, p. 34, col. 5)·
 
 
 
 
 
For a relatively rare Lesbian treatment reference, see Albert Ellis, "The Effectiveness of Psychotherapy with Individuals Who Have Severe Homosexual Problems" (28 males, 12 females), Journal of Consulting Psychology, vol. 20 (1956), p. 191-95; reprinted in
 
 
 
PAGE 595
 
The Problem of Homosexuality in Modern Society, ed. Hendrik M. Ruitenbeek, p. 175-82 (N.Y.: Dutton, 1963); and Albert Ellis, "The Use of Psychotherapy with Homosexuals" (41 males, 12 females), Mattachine Review, vol. 2, no. I (1956), p. 14-16.
 
 
 
 
56. Samuel B. Hadden, "Attitudes Toward and Approaches to the Problem of Homosexuality," Pennsylvania Medical Journal (Lemoyne, Pa.), vol. 6, no. 9 (1957), p. 1195-98.
 
 
 
For a Lesbian treatment reference, see Albert Ellis, "New Hope for Homosexuals," 1958, reprinted in The Third Sex, ed. Isadore Rubin, p. 53-57 (N.Y.: New Book Co., 1961) .
 
 
 
 
 
57. Richard C. Robertiello, Voyage from Lesbos: The Psychoanalysis of a Female Homosexual (N.Y.: Citadel, 1959), p. 238-47.
 
 
 
 
 
For a Lesbian treatment reference, see Fred Mendelsohn and Matthew Ross, "An Analysis of 133 Homosexuals Seen at A University Health Service" (109 males, 24 females), Diseases of the Nervous System, vol. 20, no. 6 (1959), p. 246-50.
 
 
 
 
 
58. Alexander B. Smith and Alexander Bassin, "Group Therapy with Homosexuals," Journal of Social Therapy (N.Y.), vol. 5, no. 3 (1959), p. 227, 231-32.  
 
 
 
 
 
59. Moses Zlotlow and Albert E. Paganini, "Autoerotic and Homoerotic Manifestations in Hospitalized Male Postlobotomy Patients, Psychiatric Quarterly (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.), vol. 33, no. 3 (1959), p. 495·
 
 
 
 
 
60. Zlotiow and Paganini, p. 492-94, 496-97.
 
 
 
 
 
Also see Thomas Szasz, The Myth of Mental Illness (N.Y.: Hoeber and Harper, 196 I).
 
 
 
 
 
61. Michael M. Miller, "Hypnotic-Aversion Treatment of Homosexuality," Journal of the National Medical Association, vol. 55, no. 5 (1963), p. 411-13, 415. Brief biographical information on Miller is in the American Medical Directory, 24th ed. (1967), part 2, p. 1503.
 
 
 
 
 
For Lesbian treatment references, see Richard C. Robertiello, "Clinical Notes: Results of Separation from Iposexual Parents During the Oedipal Period, [and] A Female Homosexual Panic," Psychoanalytic Review, vol. 51, no. 4 (1964-65), p. 670-72;
 
 
 
M. Roman, "The Treatment of the Homosexual in the Group," Topical Problems in Psychotherapy, vol. 5 (1965), p. 170-75;
 
 
 
 
 
Charles W. Socarides, "Female Homosexuality," in Sexual Behavior and the Law, ed. Ralph Slovenko, p. 462-77 (Springfield, Ill.:
 
 
 
 
 
Charles C. Thomas, 1965); Cornelia B. Wilbur, "Clinical Aspects of Female Homosexuality," in Sexual Inversion: The Multiple Roots of Homosexuality, ed. Judd Marmor, p. 268-8 I (N.Y.: Basic Books, 1965);
 
 
 
 
 
Helga Aschaffenburg, "Relationship Therapy with a Homosexual: A Case History," Pastoral Counselor, vol. 4, no. I (1964), p. 412;
 
 
 
 
 
John P. Kemph and Erna Schwerin, "Increased Latent Homosexuality in a Woman During Group Therapy," International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, vol. 16, no. 2 (1966), p. 217-24.
 
 
 
 
 
See also Thomas S. Szasz, Law, Liberty, and Psychiatry: An Inquiry into the Social Uses of Mental Health Practices (N.Y.: Macmillan, 1963);
 
 
 
 
 
Donald Webster Cory, pseud., and John P. LeRoy, pseud., "Why Homosexuals Resist Cure," Sexology, vol. 30, no. 7 (1964), p. 480-82 (an early homosexual emancipationist statement);
 
 
 
 
 
Maurice Labelle, "Laws Need to Force 'Homos' to Seek Help," Coral Gable [Fla.] Times, Feb. 4, 1965, p. 6, 8; Edwin M. Schur, Crimes without Victims; Deviant Behavior and Public Policy: Abortion, Homosexuality, and Drug Addiction (Englewood Cliffs, N.Y.: Prentice-Hall, 1965);
 
 
 
 
 
Fritz A. Fluckiger, "Research Through a Glass Darkly: An Evaluation of the Bieber Study on Homosexuality," privately printed, 1966 (a homosexual emancipationist statement).
 
 
 
 
 
62. Harvey E. Kaye and others, "Homosexuality in Women," Archives of General Psychiatry (Chicago), vol. 17 (Nov. 1967), p. 626, 633-34. Footnote omitted.
 
 
 
 
 
63. Kaye, p. 632-33.
 
 
 
PAGE 596
 
 
 
64. Joseph R. Cautela, "Covert Sensitization," Psychological Reports (Missoula, Mont.), vol. 20, no. 2 (1967), p. 464-65·
 
 
 
 
See also Donald Webster Cory, pseud., "Homosexuality," in The Encyclopedia of Sexual Behavior, eds. Albert Ellis and Albert Abarbanel, p. 485-93, 2nd rev. ed. (N.Y.:
 
Hawthorn, 1967);
 
 
 
  
Jerome D. Frank, "Treatment of Homosexuals," Working Paper Prepared for the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Homosexuality, mimeographed (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University, 1967), 13 p.;
 
  
 +
Smec, J., and Freund, Kurt. "Treatment of Male Homosexuality through Conditioning,"'' International Journal of Sexology'' (Bombay India). Vol. 7, no. 2 (1953): p. 92-93. <Check spelling of Smec>
  
Evelyn Hooker and others, "Final Report of the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Homosexuality," reprinted in SIECUS Newsletter (Dec. 1970).
 
  
 +
Socarides, Charles W. "Female Homosexuality," in ''Sexual Behavior and the Law'', ed. Ralph Slovenko (Springfield, Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1965), pages. 462-77. 
  
For Lesbian treatment references, see Thomas L. Doyle, "Homosexuality and Its Treatment," Nursing Outlook, vol. 15, no. 8 (1967), p. 38-40;
 
  
 +
Sprague, George S. "Varieties of Homosexual Manifestations," with discussion by Karl A. Menninger, Isador H. Coriat, Charles I. Lambert, Ernest M. Poate, and S. W. Hartwell, 1935; reprinted in ''The Homosexuals As Seen by Themselves and Thirty Authorities'', ed. A. M. Krich, p. 174-87 (N.Y.: Citadel, 1954).
  
Joshua s. Golden, "Varieties of Sexual Problems in Obstetrical and Gynecological Practice," in Sexual Problems: Diagnosis and Treatment in Medical Practice, ed. Charles William Wahl (N.Y.: Free Press, 1967), p. 53-61;
 
  
 +
Stekel, Wilhelm. "Is Homosexuality Curable?" Trans. Bertrand S. Frohman. ''Psychoanalytic Review''. Vol. 17 (Oct. 1930): p. 443-51.
  
Irving C. Bernstein, "Homosexuality in Gynecologic Practice," South Dakota Journal of Medicine, vol. 21 (March 1968), p. 33-39·
 
  
 +
Stevenson, Edward I. Prime (Xavier Mayne, pseud.). ''The Intersexes; A History of Similisexualism as a Problem in Social Life.'' [Naples?:] Privately printed, [by R. Rispoli, 1908?]; photo reprint, N.Y.: Amo, 1975. On treatment: pages 119-22, 549.
  
According to Blair (p. 27), a survey reported in Modern Medicine (April 1969, p. 20) found that only one in four Lesbians interviewed wanted to become heterosexual.
 
  
 +
Szasz, Thomas S. ''Law, Liberty, and Psychiatry: An Inquiry into the Social Uses of Mental Health Practices'' (N.Y.: Macmillan, 1963).
  
65. Ivan T. Rutner, "A Double-barrel Approach to Modification of Homosexual Behavior," Psychological Reports (Missoula, Mont.), vol. 26, no. 2 (1970), p. 356-58. Notes omitted.
 
  
 +
Szasz, Thomas S. ''The Manufacture of Madness: A Comparative Study of the Inquisition and the Mental Health Movement''. New York: Harper and Row, 1970. On mental institution commitment policy and practice, see Delta Books/Dell edition, 1970), pages 49-52, 54-56, 62, 64-67.
  
See also Thomas Szasz, The Manufacture of Madness (N.Y.: Harper and Row, 1970); Chicago Gay Liberation Front, "A Leaflet for the American Medical Association," (1970), reprinted in Out of the Closets; Voice of Gay Liberation, eds. Karla Jay and Allen Young (N.Y.: Douglass, 1972), p. 145-47;
 
  
 +
Szasz, Thomas S. ''The Myth of Mental Illness'' (N.Y.: Hoeber and Harper, 1961).
  
Christopher Z. Hobson (James Coleman, pseud.), "Surviving Psychotherapy," Radical Therapy, vol. 2, no. 2 (Sept. 1971), reprinted in Jay and Young, p. 147-53;
 
  
 +
Talbot, E. S., and Ellis, Havelock. "A Case of Degenerative Insanity, with Sexual Inversion, Melancholia, following Removal of Testicles, Attempted Murder and Suicide," ''Journal of Mental Science.'' Vol. 42, no. 177, new ser. no. 177 (April 1896): p. 340-44 (Le. 46-erroneous pagination in original). See [[Guy T. Olmstead Shoots William L. Clifford: March 28,1894]] on OutHistory.org.
  
Radicalesbians Health Collective, "Lesbians and the Health Care System," mimeographed, 1971, reprinted in Jay and Young, p. 122-41;
 
  
 +
Teal, Donn. ''The Gay Militants'' (New York: Stein and Day, 1971. On treatment p. 293-301.
  
Franklin E. Kameny, "Gay Liberation and Psychiatry," Psychiatric Opinion, vol. 8, no. I (Feb. 1971), p. 18-27, reprinted in The Homosexual Dialectic, ed. Joseph A. McCaffrey (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1972);
 
  
 +
Thompson, George N.  "Electroshock and Other Therapeutic Considerations in Sexual Psychopathology," ''Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease'' (New York), vol. 109, no. 6 (June 1949), p. 531-39.
  
Marty Robinson, "Homosexuals & Society: The 'Cure' Is Rebellion," Village Voice (N.Y.), April 29, 1971; Donn Teal, The Gay Militants (N.Y.: Stein and Day, 197 I; on treatment p. 293-301);
 
  
 +
Weinberg, Martin S. and Alan P. Bell, ''Homosexuality; An Annotated Bibliography'' (N.Y.: Harper and Row, 1972). Bibliography of the medical and psychological literature. Contains a large, useful, alphabetical, annotated listing of books and articles dating from 1940 to 1968 on the treatment of homosexuals. The index provides a guide to types of treatment, and the introduction lists the various indexes and guides used in the compilation.
  
Gary AIinder, "Gay Liberation Meets the Shrinks," in Jay and Young, p. 141-45.
 
  
 +
Wilbur, Cornelia B. "Clinical Aspects of Female Homosexuality," in'' Sexual Inversion: The Multiple Roots of Homosexuality,'' ed. Judd Marmor, p. 268-8 I (N.Y.: Basic Books, 1965).
  
66. A strikingly similar report of a female victim of shock treatment (though not involving homosexuality) is by Berton Roueche, "Annals of Medicine; As Empty As Eve," The New Yorker, Sept. 9,1974, p. 84-100.
 
  
 +
Zlotlow, Moses and Albert E. Paganini. "Autoerotic and Homoerotic Manifestations in Hospitalized Male Postlobotomy Patients, ''Psychiatric Quarterly'' (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.), vol. 33, no. 3 (1959), <pages ???-???>.
  
See also Charles Silverstein (review of John Bancroft's Deviant Sexual Behavior:
 
Modification and Assessment [London: Oxford University, 1974] in) Behavior Therapy, vol. 6, no. 4 (July 1975)·
 
  
 +
=Notes=
 +
<references/>
  
67. On mental institution commitment policy and practice, see Thomas S. Szasz, The Manufacture of Madness; A Comparative Study of the Inquisition and the Mental Health Movement (N.Y.: Delta Books, Dell, 1970), p. 49-52,54-56,62,64-67.
 
  
 
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Latest revision as of 19:05, 16 November 2010

Alphabeticall Bibliography on the Medical Treatment of Homosexuals and Other Sexual and Gender Variants

This section includes the Bibliography and Backnotes from the section on "Treatment" in Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (NY: Crowell, 1976), pages 589-599.[1]


The medical, surgical, and psychological treatments documented here include, in alphabetical order of their various names:

adaption therapy, asexualization, astrology, Aesthetic Realism, aversion therapy, behavior therapy, castration, chemical and surgical, conditioned reaction technique, conditioning, correction hospitals, covert sensitization, electroshock, group therapy, hysterectomy incarceration, Homo-Anonymous, hypnotic-aversion treatment, hypnotic suggestion, lobotomy, LSD, Metrazol, musical analysis, Organotherapy, ovariectomy, primal therapy, psychoanalysis, psychotherapy, pudic nerve section, relationship therapy, Scientology, sex-hormone medication, sex mutilation, shock treatment, sterilization, suggestive therapy, surgery, systematic desensitization, testosterone administration, Vegetotherapy.


See also: Timeline: Treatment of LGBT People by Doctors and Psychologists

Bibliography, Alphabetical

Abramson, Harold A. "Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD-25), III. As an Adjunct to Psychotherapy with Elimination of Fear of Homosexuality," Journal of Psychology, vol. 39 (Jan. 1955), p. 127-55. Abramson presents a verbatim recording of a four-hour interview with a forty-year-old woman, who under the influence of LSD, speaks of her fear of Lesbianism. Abramson was the LSD expert, trusted by the CIA, who in Nov. 1953 twice examined Frank R. Olson--just before Olson committed suicide as a result of his involuntary participation in a CIA drug experiment (New York Times, July 11,1975, p. 34, col. 5)·


AIinder, Gary. "Gay Liberation Meets the Shrinks," in Out of the Closets; Voice of Gay Liberation, eds. Karla Jay and Allen Young (N.Y.: Douglass, 1972), pages 141-45.


Aschaffenburg, Helga. "Relationship Therapy with a Homosexual: A Case History," Pastoral Counselor, vol. 4, no. I (1964), p. 412;


Banay, Ralph S. and L. Davidoff. "Apparent Recovery of a Sex Psychopath after Lobotomy," Journal of Criminal Psychopathology (N.Y.), vol. 4, no. I (July 1942), p. 59-66. Here the doctors report that after lobotomy the patient's masturbation stopped, he became "complacent" and "tranquil," and "showed no sign of conflict with his environment." He "remained courteous, meek, obliging and attentive." The doctors conclude that lobotomy "might be a new and important development." A psychological dynamic here, unrecognized by the doctors, is a masochistic subject asking for a lobotomy, and the sadistic physicians obliging.


Barahal, Hyman S. "Testosterone in Psychotic Male Homosexuals," Psychiatric Quarterly, vol. 14, no. 2 (1940), pages 319-30.


Barker-Benfield, G. J. The Horrors of the Half-Known Life; Male Attitudes Toward Women and Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century America (N.Y.: Harper & Row, 1976). Surgical measures for masturbation, satyriasis, etc., are cited; on sexual surgery, p. 82-83, 88-90, 91 iI., 97, 104, 120-32, 286-87, 292-93.


Barlow, David H.; Leitenberg, Harold; and Agras, W. Stewart. "Experimental Control of Sexual Deviations through Manipulation of the Noxious Scene in Covert Sensitization," Journal of Abnormal Psychology. Vol. 74, no. 5 (1969): p. 596-601. (P. 598, 601.)


Barr, Martin W. "Some Notes on Asexualization; with a Report of Eighteen Cases". Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (Lancaster, Pennsylvania), vol. 51, no. 3 (March 1920), p. 231-41. Includes references to females.


Bien, Ernest. "Why Do Homosexuals Undergo Treatment?," Anthropos (N.Y.), vol. I, no. I (Jan. 1934), p. 5-18; also in Medical Review of Reviews, vol. 40, no. I (Jan. 1934), p. 18-51.


Bergler, Edmund. "Eight Prerequisites for the Psychoanalytic Treatment of Homosexuality," Psychoanalytic Review (N.Y.), vol. 3 I (1944); see especially p. 255, 260, 266, 268-69, 277-79, 281-86.


Bergler, Edmund. "Suppositions about the Mechanism of Criminosis," Journal of Criminal Psychopathology, vol. 5 (1943), p. 215-46 (especially case 4, p. 235). Permission to reprint excerpts from Bergler's reports was denied during the preparation of Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (NY: Crowell, 1976).


Bernstein, Irving C. "Homosexuality in Gynecologic Practice," South Dakota Journal of Medicine, vol. 21 (March 1968), pages 33-39.


Blair, Ralph. Etiological and Treatment Literature on Homosexuality. Otherwise Monograph Ser., no. 5. National Task Force on Student Personnel Services and Homosexuality, 1972. Primal therapy, Vegetotherapy, musical analysis, astrology, Scientology, and Aesthetic Realism are documented, pages 36-37. See also "Part II: Treatment," for a documented discussion and summary of the subject.


Bowman, Karl M. "Sexual Deviation Research." Report to California Assembly, Judiciary Subcommittee on Sex Research, Sacramento, California, March 1952. <Number of pages?>


Bowman, Karl M., and Engle, Bernice. "The Problem of Homosexuality," Journal of Social Hygiene (New York). Vol. 39, no. I (1953): p. 2-16. (P. 10-11.)


Brill, A. A. "The Conception of Homosexuality," Journal of the American Medical Association (Chicago). Vol. 61 (Aug. 2, 1913): p. 335-40.


Brill, A. A. "The Psychiatric Approach to the Problem of Homosexuality," Psychiatric Association and Student Health Association, vol. 15 (1934), p. 31-34; reprinted in Journal Lancet, vol. 55 (1935), p. 249-52.


Brody, Morris Wolfe. "An Analysis of the Psychosexual Development of a Female: With Special Reference to Homosexuality," Psychoanalytic Review, vol. 30, no. I (1943), p. 47-58; reprinted as "Psychosexual Development of a Female" in The Homosexuals As Seen By Themselves and Thirty Authorities, ed. A. M. Krich, p. 312-24 (N.Y.: Citadel, 1954)·


Buck, W. D. "A Raid on the Uterus," New York Medical Journal, vol. 5 (August 1866), p. 464. In an extract from an address in 1866 by Dr. W. D. Buck, President of the New Hampshire State Medical Society, the doctor says: "A distinguished surgeon in New York city, twenty-five years ago [1841], said, when [Guillaume] Dupuytren's operation for relaxation of the sphincter ani was in vogue, every young man who came from Paris found every other individual's anus too large, and proceeded to pucker it up. The result was that New York anuses looked like gimlet-holes in a piece of pork." Buck goes on to say that the uterus, also, is being subjected to "surgical operations, and is now-a-days subject to all sorts of barbarity from surgeons anxious for notoriety." His statement, which bears further analysis, seems aimed at primitive abortion and birth control measures. A brief biography of Dupuytren is in John Talbott, A Biographical History of Medicine (N.Y.: Grune & Stratton, 1970), p. 342-44. Jonathan Ned Katz thanks Stephen W. Foster and Dennis Lampkowski for help with this research.


Bullough, Vern L., and Martha Voght. "Homosexuality and the 'Secret Sin' in Pre-Freudian America," Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, vol. 28, no. 2 (April 1973), p. 143-55. Surgical measures for masturbation, satyriasis, etc., are cited.


Caprio, Frank S. Female Homosexuality; A Psychodynamic Study of Lesbianism. Foreword by Karl M. Bowman. N.Y.: Grove Press, Evergreen Black Cat, 1962.


Cautela, Joseph R. "Covert Sensitization," Psychological Reports (Missoula, Montana). Vol. 20, no. 2 (1967): p. 459-68.


Cave, F. C. "Report of Sterilization in the Kansas State Home for Feeble-minded," Journal of PsychoAsthenics, vol. 15 [1911], p. 123-25; cited in Arno Karlen, Sexuality and Homosexuality; A New View (N.Y.: Norton, 1971), p. 332. In the mid-1890s, F. Hoyt Pilcher, the head of a Kansas institution for the feebleminded, had four boys and fourteen girls castrated without legal authority. It was explained in his defense that castration would prevent "excessive masturbation and pervert [sic] sexual acts". Public outcry stopped further castration.


Chicago Gay Liberation Front, "A Leaflet for the American Medical Association," (1970), reprinted in Out of the Closets; Voice of Gay Liberation, eds. Karla Jay and Allen Young (N.Y.: Douglass, 1972), p. 145-47.


Chideckel, Maurice. Female Sex Perversion. N.Y.: Eugenics Pub. Co., 1938.


Coriat, Isador. "Homosexuality. Its Psychogenesis and Treatment," New York Medical Journal, vol. 97, no. 12 (March 22, 1913), pages 589-94.


Cory, Donald Webster (pseudonym of Edward Sagarin). "Can Homosexuality Be Cured?," Sexology, vol. 18 (Oct. 1951), p. 146-56. An important early American homosexual emancipation movement statement.


Cory, Donald Webster (pseudonym of Edward Sagarin). "Homosexuality," in The Encyclopedia of Sexual Behavior, eds. Albert Ellis and Albert Abarbanel, p. 485-93, 2nd rev. ed. (N.Y.: Hawthorn, 1967).


Cory, Donald Webster (pseudonym of Edward Sagarin), and John P. LeRoy, pseud., "Why Homosexuals Resist Cure," Sexology, vol. 30, no. 7 (1964), p. 480-82. An early homosexual emancipationist statement.


"Criminal Law, Sex Offenders, Civil Commitment for Psychiatric Treatment," Columbia Law Review, vol. 39 (1939), p. 534-44;


Daniel, F. E. "Castration of Sexual Perverts," Texas Medical Journal (Austin), Aug. 1893: 255-71. Reprinted in Texas Medical Journal. Vol. 27, no. 10 (April 1912): p. 369-85· A note (p. 369) adds: "Under the title, 'Should Insane Criminals or Sexual Perverts be Permitted to Procreate?' this paper was read at the Joint Session of the World's Columbian Auxiliary Congress--Section of Medical Jurisprudence--and the International Medico-Legal Congress, August 16th, 1893, and also before the American Medico-Legal Society, New York, October 11th, 1893, and published in the 'Medico-Legal Journal' for December, and in the 'Psychological Bulletin,' New York." Dr. Daniel is identified in the 1912 reprint as the editor of the Texas Medical Journal.


Deutsch, Helene. "On Female Homosexuality," authorized trans. by Edith B. Jackson, Psychoanalytic Quarterly (New York). Vol. I (Oct. 1932): p. 484-510. A second trans.: "Homosexuality in Women," International Journal of Psychoanalysis (London), Vol. 14 (1933): p. 34-56.


Deutsch, Nicholas. Interviewed by Jonathan Katz. New York City, Oct. 17, 1974. Quoted in Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (NY: Crowell, 1976).


Doyle, Thomas L. "Homosexuality and Its Treatment," Nursing Outlook, vol. 15, no. 8 (1967), p. 38-40. Includes treatment of lesbians.


Ellis, Albert. "The Effectiveness of Psychotherapy with Individuals Who Have Severe Homosexual Problems" Journal of Consulting Psychology, vol. 20 (1956), p. 191-95 (28 males, 12 females), reprinted in The Problem of Homosexuality in Modern Society, ed. Hendrik M. Ruitenbeek, p. 175-82 (N.Y.: Dutton, 1963); and Albert Ellis, "The Use of Psychotherapy with Homosexuals" (41 males, 12 females), Mattachine Review, vol. 2, no. I (1956), p. 14-16.


Ellis, Albert. "New Hope for Homosexuals," <original publication data? 1958>, reprinted in The Third Sex, ed. Isadore Rubin, p. 53-57 (N.Y.: New Book Co., 1961) .


Ellis, Havelock. "A Note on the Treatment of Sexual Inversion," Alienist and Neurologist (St. Louis, Missouri). Vol. 17 (July 1896): p. 257-64.


Ellis, Havelock. "Sexual Inversion in Women," Alienist and Neurologist (St. Louis, Missour)i. Vol. 16, no. 2 (April 1895): 141-58.


Ellis, Havelock, and Symonds, John Addington. Sexual Inversion. 1st English ed. London: Wilson and Macmillan, 1897; photo reprint, N.¥.: Arno, 1975· (P. 73.)


Ellis, Havelock, and Talbot, E. S. See Talbot and Ellis.


"Fatal Emetine Poisoning from Aversion Treatment," Re W. T. (Westminster Inquest, Feb. 7, 1964), Medico-Legal Journal, vol. 32, no. 2 (1964), page 95. Cited in Weinberg and Bell, Homosexuality (1972), page 287. Describes the death of a patient undergoing aversion treatment for homosexuality.


Fluckiger, Fritz A. "Research Through a Glass Darkly: An Evaluation of the Bieber Study on Homosexuality," privately printed, 1966. An early homosexual emancipation statement.


Frank, Jerome D. "Treatment of Homosexuals," Working Paper Prepared for the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Homosexuality, mimeographed. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University, 1967, 13 p.


Freud, Signmund. "Letter to an American Mother" (April 9, 1935). American Journal of Psychiatry, vol. 107 (1951), p. 786-87; various reprints.


Freud, Sigmund. "The Psychogenesis of a Case of Female Homosexuality," International Journal of Psycho-Analysis (London). Vol. I, no. 2 (1920): pages 125-49. (On treatment: pages 125-27, 129-30, 131, 133, 134,135, 136, 141-42, 144, 148-49.)


Friedlander, Joseph, and Banay, Ralph S. "Psychosis Following Lobotomy in a Case of Sexual Psychopathology; Report of a Case," Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry (Chicago). Vol. 59 (1948): p. 302-21.


"Gentleman Degenerate, The. A Homosexualist's Self-Description and Self-Applied Title. Pudic Nerve Section Fails Therapeutically," Alienist and Neurologist (St. Louis, Missouri). Vol. 2$, no. I (Feb. I, 1904): p. 62-70. The editor of this journal, Dr. Charles H. Hughes of St. Louis, may be the anonymous physician-author of this piece.


Gilbert, J. A. "Homosexuality and Its Treatment." Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (Lancaster, Pennsylvania), vol. 52, No. 4 (Oct. 1920), pages 297-322 (life of Alberta Lucile/Alan Hart; reproduced in Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (NY: Crowell, 1976), Part III, Passing Women, and on OutHIstory.org.


Glass, S. J., and Johnson, Roswell, H. "Limitations and Complications of Organotherapy in Male Homosexuality," Journal of Clinical Endocrinology (Philadelphia). Vol. 4, no. I I (1944): p. 540--44.


Golden, Joshua S. "Varieties of Sexual Problems in Obstetrical and Gynecological Practice," in Sexual Problems: Diagnosis and Treatment in Medical Practice, ed. Charles William Wahl (New York: Free Press, 1967), p. 53-61. Lesbian references.


Goodell, C. E. "Sexual Perversion, Its Effects and Its Treatment," Medical Era (St. Louis, Missour), vol. 19 (1910), pages 499-502.


Goodell, C. E. "Suggestive Therapy in Sexual Perversion," American Journal of Dermatology and Genito-Urinary Disease (St. Louis, Missouri), vol. 8 (1904), p. 104-06.


Hackfield, A. W. "Ameliorative Effects of Therapeutic Castration on Habitual Sex Offenders," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, vol. 82, no. I (July 1935), p. 15-29; no. 2 (Aug. 1935), p. 169-81.


Hadden, Samuel B. "Attitudes Toward and Approaches to the Problem of Homosexuality," Pennsylvania Medical Journal (Lemoyne, Pennsylvania). Vol. 6, no. 9 (1957): p. 1195-98.


Harms, Ernest. "Homo-Anonymous," Diseases of the Nervous System (Memphis, Tennessee). Vol. 14, no. 10 (1953): pages 318-19.


Henry, George W. Essentials of Psychiatry. Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1938.


Henry, George W. Sex Variants; A Study of Homosexual Patterns. 2 vols. N.Y.: Paul B. Hoeber, 1941.


Hirschfeld, Magnus. "Adaptionsbehandlung (Anpassungstherapie) der HomosexualiHit." This chapter appears in the first, 1914, German edition. Translation by Henry Gerber from Die Homosexualitiit des Mannes und des Weibes, 2nd ed. (Berlin: Louis Marcus, 1920): chap. 23, pages. 439-61, in ONE Institute Quarterly (Los Angeles), vol. 5, nos. 2, 3, 4, issues 17 (Spring, Summer, Fall 1962): p. 41-54. Translation by Richard Plant in Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (NY: Crowell, 1976), "Treatment."


Hobson, Christopher Z. (writing as James Coleman, pseud.), "Surviving Psychotherapy," Radical Therapy, vol. 2, no. 2 (Sept. 1971), reprinted in Jay and Young (above), p. 147-53.


Hooker, Evelyn, and others, "Final Report of the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Homosexuality," reprinted in SIECUS Newsletter (Dec. 1970).


Hughes, Charles H. "An Emasculated Homo-sexual. His Antecedent and Post-Operative Life," Alienist and Neurologist. Vol. 35 (1914): p. 277-80.


Institute for Sex Research. Mimeographed bibliographies on "Homosexuality-Aversion and Behavior Therapy" (Nov. 1972) and "Homosexuality Therapy: Pre-1940" (May 1974)·


Kahn, Samuel. A Study of Homosexuals and Their Education in the New York Correction Hospitals. M. A. thesis, New York University School of Education, 1923, 149 p.


Kameny, Franklin E. "Gay Liberation and Psychiatry." Psychiatric Opinion, vol. 8, no. I (Feb. 1971), p. 18-27, reprinted in The Homosexual Dialectic, ed. Joseph A. McCaffrey (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1972), pages <???-???>


Katz, Jonathan Ned. "Treatment" (including Bibliography and Notes), in Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1976.


Kaye, Harvey E.; Berl, S.; Clare, J.; Eleston, M. R.; Gershwin, B. S.; Gershwin, P.; Kogan, S.; Torda, c.; and Wilbur, C. B. "Homosexuality in Women," Archives of General Psychiatry (Chicago). Vol. 17 (Nov. 1967): p. 626-34.


Kemph, John P. and Erna Schwerin, "Increased Latent Homosexuality in a Woman During Group Therapy," International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, vol. 16, no. 2 (1966), pages 217-24.


Kiernan, James G. "Insanity. Lecture XXVI.-Perversion," Detroit Lancet. Vol. 7, no. II (May 1884): p. 481-84. (P. 483-84.)


Kiernan, James G. "Psychical Treatment of Congenital Sexual Inversion," Review of Insanity and Nervous Disease (Milwaukee, Wisconsin). Vol. 4, no. 4 (June 1894): p. 293-95·


Klaich, Dolores. Woman + Woman; Attitudes Toward Lesbianism. N.Y.: Morrow, 1975, paperback. (P. 100-01.)


Kopp, Marie E. "Surgical Treatment as Sex Crime Prevention Measure." Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, vol. 28 (Jan.-Feb. 1938), p. 687, etc. <pages ?> Says that between 1889 and 1907 Dr. Sharp of the State Reformatory for Delinquent Boys at Jefferson, Indiana, performed "several hundred" vasectomies.


Krafft-Ebing, R. von. Psychopathia Sexualis, with Special Reference to Contrary Sexual Instinct. A Medico-Legal Study. Authorized trans. of the 7th enlarged and rev. German ed. by Charles Gilbert Chaddock (Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1893). Material on treatment of contrary sexual instinct.


Krafft-Ebing, R. von. Text Book of Insanity (Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1904).


Krich, A. M., ed. The Homosexuals As Seen by Themselves and Thirty Authorities. (N.Y.: Citadel, 1954).


Labelle, Maurice. "Laws Need to Force 'Homos' to Seek Help." Coral Gable Times (Florida), Feb. 4, 1965, p. 6, 8.


Liebman, Samuel. "Homosexuality, Transvestism, and Psychosis: Study of a Case Treated with Electroshock," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (New York). Vol. 99, no. 6 (1944): p. 945-58.


Lind, Earl (Ralph Werther/Jennie June). Autobiography of an Androgyne, ed. with an intro. by Alfred W. Herzog (N.Y.: MedicoLegal Press, 1918; photo reprint, N.Y.: Arno, 1975). On his castration: pages 41-42, 74, 197-201, 230. On OutHistory.org see Earl Lind.


Lind, Earl (Ralph Werther/Jennie June). The Female Impersonators... , ed. with intro. by Alfred W. Herzog (N.Y.: Medico-Legal Press, 1922; photo reprint, N.Y.: Arno, 1975). On his castration: pages. 16, 67. On OutHistory.org, see Earl Lind.


LoPiccolo, Joseph. "Case Study: Systematic Desensitization of Homosexuality," Behavior Therapy. Vol. 2, no. 3 (July 1971): p. 394-99· (P. 396-98.)


Lydston, G. Frank. "Sex Mutilations in Social Therapeutics, With Some of the Difficulties in the Application of Eugenics to the Human Race," New York Medical Journal, April 6, 1912, pages ???-???.


Lydston, G. Frank. "Sexual Perversion, Satyriasis and Nymphomania," Medical and Surgical Reporter (Philadelphia). Vol. 61, no. 10 (Sept. 7,1889): p. 253-58; Vol. 61, no. II (Sept. 14, 1889): 281-85. A lecture delivered at the Chicago College of Physicians and Surgeons. Although he discusses male and female homosexuality, Lydston makes no specific recommendation for treatment. But since he links homosexuality with satyriasis and nymphomania, there is an unspoken suggestion that it should be similarly treated; for the two "perversions" of which he speaks Lydston suggests "removal of irritation of the sexual apparatus," "anaphrodisiac remedies," "attempts to restrain sexual excesses, or to break the habit of masturbation." But if the "disease" is organic, it is probably incurable and requires more radical treatment: "In women, extirpation of the ovaries, or the procedure of Mr. Baker Brown--clitoridectomy--may be performed. Howe recommends the application of the actual cautery to the back of the neck. Basing this treatment upon the theory that the disease takes its origin in over-excitation of the nerve fibres of the cerebellum or some of the ganglia in the neighborhood, he also suggests blisters and setons to answer the same purpose. Dry cupping to the nucha is also serviceable. Means to restore the general health are always indicated. In the severe cases of the maniacal form of excessive sexual desire the asylum is usually our only recourse".


Max, Louis William. "Breaking Up a Homosexual Fixation by the Conditioned Reaction Technique: A Case Study," Psychological Bulletin (Washington, D.C.), Vol. 32 (1935): p. 734·


Mendelsohn, Fred, and Matthew Ross, "An Analysis of 133 Homosexuals Seen at A University Health Service". Diseases of the Nervous System, vol. 20, no. 6 (1959), p. 246-50. (109 males, 24 females).


Miller, Michael M. "Hypnotic-Aversion Treatment of Homosexuality," Journal of the National Medical Association. Vol. 55, no. 5 (1963): p. 411-15, 436. Brief biographical information on Miller is in the American Medical Directory, 24th ed. (1967), part 2, p. 1503.


Modern Medicine (April 1969, p. 20). According to Blair above (p. 27), a survey reported in Modern Medicine found that only one in four Lesbians interviewed wanted to become heterosexual. <Full citation???>


Moll, Albert. Perversions of the Sex Instinct. Newark, New Jersey: Julian Press, 1931.


Moore, Thomas V. "The Pathogenesis and Treatment of Homosexual Disorders: A Digest of Some Pertinent Evidence," Journal of Personality (Durham, North Carolina). Vol. 14 (1945): p. 47-83.


Oberhoffer, Emil. The Influence of Castration on the Libido," American Journal of Urology and Sexology, vol. 12 (Jan.-Dec. 1916), p. 58-60. <Check date of publication and correct if necessary.>


Owensby, Newdigate M. 'The Correction of Homosexuality," Urologic and Cutaneous Review (St. Louis, Missouri). Vol. 45, no. 8 (1941): p. 494-96.


Owensby, Newdigate. "Homosexuality and Lesbianism Treated with Metrazol," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (New York). Vol. 92, no. I (1940): p. 65-66.


Parker, William. Homosexuality; A Selective Bibliography of Over 3.000 Items (Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1971). Documents on various treatment forms through 1969 are listed and indexed.


Potter, La Forest. Strange Loves: A Study in Sexual Abnormalities (N.Y.: Robert Dodsley, 1933). On treatment, pages 161-62; 167, 173, 177-78; 118-19; 147; 236-37·


Quackenbos, John Duncan. "Hypnotic Suggestion in the Treatment of Sexual Perversions and Moral Anaesthesia: A Personal Experience," Transactions of the New Hampshire Medical Society (Concord), 1899: pages 69-91.


Radicalesbians Health Collective. "Lesbians and the Health Care System," mimeographed, 1971, reprinted in Out of the Closets; Voice of Gay Liberation, eds. Karla Jay and Allen Young (N.Y.: Douglass, 1972), pages 122-41.


Raffalovich, Marc Andre. "Uranism, Congenital Sexual Inversion. Observations and Recommendations ... " Trans. C. Judson Herrick. Journal of Comparative Neurology. Vol. 5 (March 1895): p. 33-65. Advocates abstinence for homosexuals and heterosexuals. On Raffalovich see Timothy d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest; Some Notes on the Lives and Writings of English 'Uranian' Poets from 1889 to 1930 (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1970), p. 29-34, 53, 77, 107, 153, 186, 249 and Brian Reade, ed., Sexual Heretics; Male Homosexuality in English Literature from 1850 to 1900 (N.Y.: Coward McCann, 1970), pages 32-35, 38, 40, 50, 53·


"Removal of the Ovaries as a Therapeutic Measure in Public Institutions for the Insane," Journal of the American Medical Association (Chicago), Feb. 4, 1893, p. 135-37. <There may be an earlier article on this in January.> Dr. Joseph Price mentioned: p. 136-37. Also see "Domestic Correspondence," same, Feb. 18, 1893, p. 182-83. For comment on this article see Dr. F. E. Daniel (1893) on OutHistory.org.


Riedner, K. "Cure of Homosexuals," Sexology (New York), vol. I (1933), p. 490-92.


Robertiello, Richard C. "Clinical Notes: Results of Separation from Iposexual Parents During the Oedipal Period, [and] A Female Homosexual Panic," Psychoanalytic Review, vol. 51, no. 4 (1964-65), p. 670-72.


Robertiello, Richard C. Voyage from Lesbos: The Psychoanalysis of a Female Homosexual. N.¥.: Citadel, 1959. (P. 238-48, 253.)


Robinson, Marty. "Homosexuals & Society: The 'Cure' Is Rebellion," Village Voice (New York), April 29, 1971.


Roman, M. "The Treatment of the Homosexual in the Group," Topical Problems in Psychotherapy, vol. 5 (1965), p. 170-75.


Rosenzweig, Saul, and Hoskins, R. G. "A Note on the Ineffectualness of Sex-Hormone Medication in a Case of Pronounced Homosexuality," Psychosomatic Medicine. Vol. 3, no. 1 (1941): p.87-89·


Roueche, Berton. "Annals of Medicine; As Empty As Eve," The New Yorker. Sept. 9, 1974: p.84-100. Report on a female victim of shock treatment (though not involving homosexuality).


Rutner, Ivan I. "A Double-barrel Approach to Modification of Homosexual Behavior," Psychological Reports (Missoula, Montana). Vol. 26, no. 2 (1970): p. 355-58.


Schrenck-Notzing, Albert von. Therapeutic Suggestion in Psychopathia Sexualis with Especial Reference to Contrary Sexual Instinct. Authorized trans. from the German by Charles Gilbert Chaddock. Phila.: F. A. Davis, 1895.


Schur, Edwin M. Crimes without Victims; Deviant Behavior and Public Policy: Abortion, Homosexuality, and Drug Addiction (Englewood Cliffs, N.Y.: Prentice-Hall, 1965).


Sharp, Harry Clay. "Human Sterilization." Journal of the American Medical Association, vol. 4, no. 12 (1909), pages ???-???.


Sharp, Harry Clay. "The Sterilization of Degenerates." Indiana Board of State Charities. National Christian League for the Promotion of Purity, 1908. Reprint of paper read before the American Prison Association, Chicago, 1909. Copy in N.Y. Public Library, Research Division.


Silverstein, Charles. [Review of John Bancroft's Deviant Sexual Behavior: Modification and Assessment. London: Oxford University Press, 1974.] Behavior Therapy. Vol. 6, no. 4 (July 1975), pages <???>.


SInclair, Jo (pseudonym of Ruth Seid). Wasteland. New York: Harper, 1946. Novel in which a lesbian who has come to accepting terms with her orientation helps her brother come to terms with his Jewish heritage. See: Sinclair (Seid): "Wasteland," 1946


Smith, Alexander B., and Bassin, Alexander. "Group Therapy with Homosexuals," Journal of Social Therapy (New York). Vol. 5, no. 3 (1959): p. 225-32.


Smec, J., and Freund, Kurt. "Treatment of Male Homosexuality through Conditioning," International Journal of Sexology (Bombay India). Vol. 7, no. 2 (1953): p. 92-93. <Check spelling of Smec>


Socarides, Charles W. "Female Homosexuality," in Sexual Behavior and the Law, ed. Ralph Slovenko (Springfield, Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1965), pages. 462-77.


Sprague, George S. "Varieties of Homosexual Manifestations," with discussion by Karl A. Menninger, Isador H. Coriat, Charles I. Lambert, Ernest M. Poate, and S. W. Hartwell, 1935; reprinted in The Homosexuals As Seen by Themselves and Thirty Authorities, ed. A. M. Krich, p. 174-87 (N.Y.: Citadel, 1954).


Stekel, Wilhelm. "Is Homosexuality Curable?" Trans. Bertrand S. Frohman. Psychoanalytic Review. Vol. 17 (Oct. 1930): p. 443-51.


Stevenson, Edward I. Prime (Xavier Mayne, pseud.). The Intersexes; A History of Similisexualism as a Problem in Social Life. [Naples?:] Privately printed, [by R. Rispoli, 1908?]; photo reprint, N.Y.: Amo, 1975. On treatment: pages 119-22, 549.


Szasz, Thomas S. Law, Liberty, and Psychiatry: An Inquiry into the Social Uses of Mental Health Practices (N.Y.: Macmillan, 1963).


Szasz, Thomas S. The Manufacture of Madness: A Comparative Study of the Inquisition and the Mental Health Movement. New York: Harper and Row, 1970. On mental institution commitment policy and practice, see Delta Books/Dell edition, 1970), pages 49-52, 54-56, 62, 64-67.


Szasz, Thomas S. The Myth of Mental Illness (N.Y.: Hoeber and Harper, 1961).


Talbot, E. S., and Ellis, Havelock. "A Case of Degenerative Insanity, with Sexual Inversion, Melancholia, following Removal of Testicles, Attempted Murder and Suicide," Journal of Mental Science. Vol. 42, no. 177, new ser. no. 177 (April 1896): p. 340-44 (Le. 46-erroneous pagination in original). See Guy T. Olmstead Shoots William L. Clifford: March 28,1894 on OutHistory.org.


Teal, Donn. The Gay Militants (New York: Stein and Day, 1971. On treatment p. 293-301.


Thompson, George N. "Electroshock and Other Therapeutic Considerations in Sexual Psychopathology," Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (New York), vol. 109, no. 6 (June 1949), p. 531-39.


Weinberg, Martin S. and Alan P. Bell, Homosexuality; An Annotated Bibliography (N.Y.: Harper and Row, 1972). Bibliography of the medical and psychological literature. Contains a large, useful, alphabetical, annotated listing of books and articles dating from 1940 to 1968 on the treatment of homosexuals. The index provides a guide to types of treatment, and the introduction lists the various indexes and guides used in the compilation.


Wilbur, Cornelia B. "Clinical Aspects of Female Homosexuality," in Sexual Inversion: The Multiple Roots of Homosexuality, ed. Judd Marmor, p. 268-8 I (N.Y.: Basic Books, 1965).


Zlotlow, Moses and Albert E. Paganini. "Autoerotic and Homoerotic Manifestations in Hospitalized Male Postlobotomy Patients, Psychiatric Quarterly (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.), vol. 33, no. 3 (1959), <pages ???-???>.


Notes

  1. In the acknowledgements in that section, Katz thanks "James D. Steakley for his help in compiling this part, and for writing a first draft of the general introduction and introductions to the documents. Responsibility for the final versions is my own." For hysterectomy as treatment, see Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (NY: Crowell, 1976), Part 3, "Passing Women," p. 276, 606n. 69.


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