Difference between revisions of "Heterosexual History Timeline, Part 1"
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Revision as of 20:28, 23 November 2010
A chronology of events in heterosexual history
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
Oldest references listed first:
1700
See Trumbach, Randolph. Sex and the Gender Revolution: Heterosexuality and the Third Gender in Enlightenment London. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998, who dates the construction of the heterosexual/homosexual sex/gender system to 1700 in London.
- Contrast this with Katz, 1995, who suggests that the development of the heterosexual/homosexual organization of sexuality and gender as a particular historical system was roughly coterminus with the development and distribution of the terminology and conception of heterosexuality and homosexuality.
1868, May 6
In a letter, in German, to Karl Heinrich Ulrichs on this date an early sex-law reformer, the writer Karl Maria Kerbeny, is first known to have privately used four new terms he had coined: "Monosexual; Homosexual; Heterosexual; und Heterogenit" -- the debut of the homosexual and heterosexual categories, and two now forgotten terms. (See: Kertbeny: "Homosexual," "Heterosexual," May 6, 1868)
1880
The word heterosexual was used publicly for the first time, in Germany, in 1880, in a book titled Discovery of the Soul, by a zoologist, Gustav Jäger. (See: Jäger: "Heterosexual," 1880)
1889
The term heterosexual appears in the 4th German edition of R. Krafft-Ebing's Psychopathia Sexualis . . . (Stuttgart: Ferdinand Enke), 96-97.(Katz, "Invention of Heterosexuality," Socialist Review, January-March, 1990, Note 1, page 30.) (See: Krafft-Ebing: "Heterosexual," 1889)
1892, May
The earliest-known use of the word heterosexual in the United States occurs in an article by Dr. James G. Kiernan, published in a Chicago medical journal on this date. (See: Kiernan: "Heterosexual," "Homosexual," May 1892)
1901
Dorland's Medical Dictionary: "Heterosexuality", 1901
- "Heterosexuality" is defined as "Abnormal or perverted appetite toward the opposite sex."
1902, February 15
Kiernan, James G. "Heredity." Medical News (New York); Vol. 80, Issue 7; pg. 291-99.
- The words "heterosexual" and "homosexual" appear on page 4: "The psychic phase of instincts so fundamental as the reproductive instinct may appear even when there is congenital absence or rudimentary development of organs upon which its expression depends. [A Note 17 attributes this to Clara Barrus. American Journal of Insanity, 1894-95. Kiernan then adds a statement using the new terms:] Psycho-sexual manifestations may remain indifferent until adolescence, may be of homosexual type (the same sex), or may be of heterosexual type (opposite sex), or may be hermaphrodidic (both sexes)."
1909
Merriam-Webster's New International Dictionary.
- "Homosexuality" makes its debut in this authoritative dictionary as a "Med." (medical) term meaning "morbit sexual passion for one of the same sex." "Heterosexuality" first appears in Merriam-Webster's fourteen years later. See 1923, Merriam-Webster's. Compare with 1934, Merriam-Webster's.Cite error: Closing
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tag But see Ellis, 1915.
1910
Freud, Sigmund. Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory. First publication in New York, in English translation.[1]
1914, March
Putnam, James J. "On Some of the Broader Issues of the Psychoanalytic Movement. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences. Vol. 147, No. 3; pp. 389- (18 pp.) Word "heterosexual" appears. Template:Research on what page? Sentence? Context?
1914, November 22
New York Times: "homosexual," November 22, 1914
- First use of word homosexual in The Times. See 1923, June 24 for the first use of the word heterosexual in The TImes.
1915
Ellis, Havelock. Sexual Inversion. Philadelphia: Davis and Co., 1915.
- Uses term "heterosexual" in the modern mode as a simple, precise, natural word for the sex-love of the sexes. Compare with Ellis, 1910.[2]
1923
"Heterosexuality" makes its debut in Merriam-Webster's New International Dictionary as as a "Med." [medical] term meaning "morbid sexual passion for one of the opposite sex." According to the old reproductive standard, and as not-necessarily-procreative, heterosex was still considered abnormal or perverted. Compare with 1909 Merriam-Webster's and 1934.
1923, June 24
See New York Times: "homosexual," "heterosexual," June 24, 1923 for the first use of the word "heterosexual" and the second use of the word "homosexual" in that newspaper. This is also the first time the two new terms had appared together in The Times. The hetero/homo binary was making it's way into the 20th Century mind.
1924, September 2
Mary Keyt Isham: Freud's "Group Psychology", September 7, 1924 talks of "repressed hetero-sexuality" and "hetero-sexual love".
1928, April 23
Josephine A. Jackson, M.D.: "heterosexual", April 23, 1928
- From: < ??? > Canada.[3]
1928
Mead, Margaret. Coming of Age in Samoa: A Psychological Study of Primitive Youth for Western Civilization. Place of publication, publisher?
- "for the first time, she presented to the public the idea that the individual experience of developmental stages could be shaped by cultural demands and expectations. Adolescence, she wrote, might be more or less stormy, and sexual development more or less problematic in different cultures. The 'civilized' world, she taught us had much to learn from the 'primitive.'"[4]
1930, April 20
Louis Kronenberger: Gide's "The Immoralist", April 20, 1930, a review of the novel in The New York Times, describes the main character as moving "from a heterosexual liaison to a homosexual one".
1930, September 14
Henry James Forman: Dell's "Love in the Machine Age", September 14, 1930, a review in The New York Times, urges parents to let their children "develop normally to heterosexual adulthood". Otherwise, "infantilism, prostitution, and homosexuality" will result.
1934
Merriam-Webster's New International Dictionary.
- Heterosexuality is defined as "sexual passion for one of the opposite sex; normal sexuality". Homosexuality is defined as " eroticism for one of the same sex."Jonathan Ned Katz, The Invention of Heterosexuality (NY: Dutton, March 1995), page 92, note 28 on page ???</ref>
1939, April 21
George W. Crane: “Case Records of a Psychologist”, April 21, 1939
- From <?>
1948, January 5
Official publication date of Sexual Behavior in the Human Male by Alfred Charles Kinsey, Wardell B. Pomeroy, Clyde E. Martin. Philadelphia: Saunders. (R. J. Suresha, 'Properly Placed Before the Public': Publication and Translation of the . . . ." 2008.)
1949, Summer
Baldwin, James. "Preservation of Innocence." Zero (Tangier, Morocco) 1:2 (Summer 1949); reprinted Outlook 2:2 (Fall 1989): 40-45.
See: Heterosexual History Timeline, Part 2
Notes
- ↑ Jonathan Ned Katz, The Invention of Heterosexuality (NY: Dutton, March 1995), page 87, not 13 on page ???
- ↑ Jonathan Ned Katz, The Invention of Heterosexuality (NY: Dutton, March 1995), page 88, note 16 on page ???
- ↑ Accessed November 22, 2010 from:
- ↑ Accessed April 30, 2010 from: http://www.interculturalstudies.org/Mead/bibliography.html#byMead
Additions TO BE PUT IN CHRONO ORDER
ADDITIONS from the Bibliography in Katz's The Invention of Heterosexuality, 1995.
APPIAH, ANTHONY. 'The Uncompleted Argument: Du Bois and the Illusion of Race." In Gates, ed.: 21-37.
BERNHEIMER, CHARLES, and CLAIRE KAHANE, eds. In Dora's Case: Freud, Hysteria, Feminism. NY: Columbia University Press, 1985.
BERUBE, ALLAN. Coming Out Under Fire: The History of Gay Men and Women
Halsall, Paul. A History of Heterosexuality? Date first created on website? Accessed April 25, 2010. Online at: http://www.fordham.edu/HALSALL/pwh/hethist.html
Katz, New School Talk.
Seidman?
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