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Drawing on tens of thousands of letters gleaned from more than a dozen archives and libraries and scores of personal interviews (ranging from members of sexual subcultures who demanded anonymity to congressmen, university presidents, prize-winning scientists, and heads of foundations), Jones has written an incisive, psychologically nuanced portrait that truly separates the myth from the man. Jones shows that the public image of disinterested biologist cultivated by Kinsey was in fact a carefully crafted public persona. The Kinsey who emerges in these pages was a social reformer, a zealot, who devoted his every waking hour to the destruction of sexual repression. [publisher's description]
Sexologists --- Sexology --- Biography. --- Kinsey, Alfred Charles --- United States --- Biography --- Sex --- Social scientists --- Kinsey, Alfred C. --- Kinsey, Alfred Charles, --- Sexologists - United States - Biography. --- Sexology - United States.
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Vie sexuelle --- Morale sexuelle --- Industries du sexe --- Prostitution --- Sexualité --- Moeurs et coutumes --- Droit --- Religion --- Dans les médias --- Kinsey, Alfred Charles --- Uhse, Beate. --- Appréciation --- Sex industry. --- Sexual ethics. --- Kinsey, Alfred C. --- Germany --- Social life and customs.
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"Drucker develops a synthetic argument about how Kinsey's scholarship and training as an entomologist and evolutionary scientist affected his teaching, research, writing, and analysis of human behavior. Places Kinsey at the center of trends in American intellectual and scientific life in the mid-twentieth century. Drucker uses the whole of Kinsey's intellectual life to address questions of data collection and scientific objectivity, and whether it is possible to have research approaches and frameworks for studying human sexuality that could satisfy ever-shifting delineations and measurements of objectivity"-- "Alfred C. Kinsey's revolutionary studies of human sexual behavior are world-renowned. His meticulous methods of data collection, from comprehensive entomological assemblies to personal sex history interviews, raised the bar for empirical evidence to an entirely new level. In The Classification of Sex, Donna J. Drucker presents an original analysis of Kinsey's scientific career in order to uncover the roots of his research methods. She describes how his enduring interest as an entomologist and biologist in the compilation and organization of mass data sets structured each of his classification projects. As Drucker shows, Kinsey's lifelong mission was to find scientific truth in numbers and through observation-and to record without prejudice in the spirit of a true taxonomist. Kinsey's doctoral work included extensive research of the gall wasp, where he gathered and recorded variations in over six million specimens. His classification and reclassification of Cynips led to the speciation of the genus that remains today. During his graduate training, Kinsey developed a strong interest in evolution and the links between entomological and human behavior studies. In 1920, he joined Indiana University as a professor in zoology, and soon published an introductory text on biology, followed by a coauthored field guide to edible wild plants. In 1938, Kinsey began teaching a noncredit course on marriage, where he openly discussed sexual behavior and espoused equal opportunity for orgasmic satisfaction in marital relationships. Soon after, he began gathering case histories of sexual behavior. As a pioneer in the nascent field of sexology, Kinsey saw that the key to its cogency was grounded in observation combined with the collection and classification of mass data. To support the institutionalization of his work, he cofounded the Institute for Sex Research at Indiana University in 1947. He and his staff eventually conducted over eighteen thousand personal interviews about sexual behavior, and in 1948 he published Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, to be followed in 1953 by Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. As Drucker's study shows, Kinsey's scientific rigor and his early use of data recording methods and observational studies were unparalleled in his field. Those practices shaped his entire career and produced a wellspring of new information, whether he was studying gall wasp wings, writing biology textbooks, tracing patterns of evolution, or developing a universal theory of human sexuality"--
Science --- Classification of sciences --- Research --- Sexology --- Methodology --- Kinsey, Alfred C. --- Classification of sciences. --- Methodology. --- History. --- Kinsey, Alfred C., --- SCIENCE / History. --- Sex --- Knowledge, Classification of --- Sciences, Classification of --- Classification --- Scientific method --- Logic, Symbolic and mathematical --- Kinsey, Alfred Charles, --- Science - Methodology --- Research - United States --- Sexology - United States --- Kinsey, Alfred C. - (Alfred Charles), - 1894-1956
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What is the relationship between intelligence and sex? In recent decades, studies of the controversial histories of both intelligence testing and of human sexuality in the United States have been increasingly common-and hotly debated. But rarely have the intersections of these histories been examined. In Gentlemen's Disagreement, Peter Hegarty enters this historical debate by recalling the debate between Lewis Terman-the intellect who championed the testing of intelligence- and pioneering sex researcher Alfred Kinsey, and shows how intelligence and sexuality have interacted in American psychology. Through a fluent discussion of intellectually gifted onanists, unhappily married men, queer geniuses, lonely frontiersmen, religious ascetics, and the two scholars themselves, Hegarty traces the origins of Terman's complaints about Kinsey's work to show how the intelligence testing movement was much more concerned with sexuality than we might remember. And, drawing on Foucault, Hegarty reconciles these legendary figures by showing how intelligence and sexuality in early American psychology and sexology were intertwined then and remain so to this day.
Men --- Hommes --- Sexual behavior. --- Sexualité --- Kinsey, Alfred C. --- Terman, Lewis Madison, --- Human males --- Human beings --- Males --- Effeminacy --- Masculinity --- Male sexuality --- Intelligence levels. --- Terman, Lewis M. --- Kinsey, Alfred Charles, --- alfred kinsey, lewis terman, intelligence, sexuality, psychology, onanists, marriage, happiness, satisfaction, queer, lgbtq, lgbt, lgbtqia, frontier, loneliness, isolation, religion, ascetics, scholars, genius, sexology, men, masculinity, masturbation, husbands, sex, passion, queerness, gay, homosexuality, monasticism, celibacy, social norms, normal, deviance, kink, eugenics, nonfiction, history, sociology, politics, science.
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