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Books in the Genders and Sexualities in History series

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  • - Radicalism, Reform and Gender in England
    by Victoria F. Russell
    £110.49

    Deeply concerned with the growing segregation of the sexes, supported seemingly by arbitrary and increasingly binary models of sexual difference, heterodox radicals insisted that while the body might be sexed, the mind was not.

  • - Trailing Abuse
    by Nick Basannavar
    £110.49

    It shows instead that although categories such as 'child sexual abuse' and 'paedophilia' may be relatively recent linguistic value-constructs, sexual violence against children has existed and been represented across historical moments, in changeable and challenging ways.

  • by Lucia Pozzi
    £54.99

    This book is the first to present a comprehensive historical picture of the modern Catholic concern with the body and sexuality.

  • by Lisa M. Todd
    £83.49

    Reconsidering sex in war brings to life a whole cast of characters too often left out of the historical narrative: widowed women who worked as prostitutes, fresh-faced recruits who experienced the war in a VD hospital, eugenicists who conflated sex and national decline, soldiers' wives ostracized by neighbourhood rumour mills.

  • - Perceptions and Participation in Northwest Europe
    by Andrew DJ Shield
    £83.49

    This book focuses on the latter half of the twentieth century, when much of northwest Europe grew increasingly multicultural with the arrival of foreign workers and (post-)colonial migrants, whilst simultaneously experiencing a boom in feminist and sexual liberation activism.

  • - Constructions of Identity and Citizenship in Belgium
    by J. Hoegaerts
    £50.99

    A history of what it meant to be a man, and a citizen of an emerging nation throughout the nineteenth century. This book not only relates how Belgians were taught how to move and fight, but also how they spoke and sang to express masculinity and patriotism.

  • - Religion, Gender and Identity in Victorian England
    by M. Yamaguchi
    £88.49 - 110.49

    A Victorian parsonage was a 'religious family enterprise', a showcase of ruling ideas, the headquarters of parish charities and a point of connection for multilayered networks in and outside the parish. This book focuses on the lives of women brought up in this setting, as the Church of England steered its way through the secularisation of society.

  • by T. Reinke-Williams
    £99.49

    Drawing on legal and literary sources, this work revises and expands understandings of female honesty, worth and credit by exploring how women from the middling and lower ranks of society fashioned positive identities as mothers, housewives, domestic managers, retailers and neighbours between 1550 and 1700.

  • - Homosexuality and Home Life in Twentieth-Century London
    by M. Cook
    £99.49 - 120.99

    Sissy home boys or domestic outlaws? Through a series of vivid case studies taken from across the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Matt Cook explores the emergence of these trenchant stereotypes and looks at how they play out in the home and family lives of queer men.

  • - Cityscape and Sexuality in Cold War Berlin
    by J. Evans
    £50.99

    As home to 1920s excess and Hitler's Final Solution, Berlin's physical and symbolic landscape was an important staging ground for the highs and lows of modernity. In Cold War Berlin, social and political boundaries were porous, and the rubble gave refuge to a re-emerging gay and lesbian scene, youth gangs, prostitutes, hoods, and hustlers.

  • by Douglas Ogilvy Pretsell
    £66.99 - 77.99

    This book will be the first critical edition of all the surviving correspondence to, from and about Karl Heinrich Ulrichs between 1846 and 1894. The correspondence between the years of 1846 and 1894 covers three definable periods: the years before Ulrichs began writing (1846-1864);

  • - Prostitution in Post-war Britain
    by Julia Laite & Samantha Caslin
    £120.99

    This critical sourcebook compiles excerpts from the extensive interviews undertaken by the Wolfenden Committee on the subject of prostitution. Crucially, this book highlights the substantial evidence gathered by the Committee on prostitution outside of London, which the Wolfenden Report itself largely disregarded.

  • by Heather Ellis
    £99.49

    This book offers the first in-depth study of the masculine self-fashioning of scientific practitioners in nineteenth and early twentieth-century Britain.

  • by Aidan Beatty
    £29.49

    This book is a comparative study of masculinity and white racial identity in Irish nationalism and Zionism.

  • - Queer Identities in Australia in the Second World War
    by Yorick Smaal
    £88.49

    Sex, Soldiers and the South Pacific, 1939-45 explores the queer dynamics of war across Australia and forward bases in the south seas. It examines relationships involving Allied servicemen, civilians and between the legal and medical fraternities that sought to regulate and contain expressions of homosex in and out of the forces.

  • - So Much Honest Poverty in Britain, 1870-1930
    by Marjorie Levine-Clark
    £99.49

    This book examines how, from the late nineteenth century through the 1920s, British policymakers, welfare providers, and working-class men struggled to accommodate men's dependence on the state within understandings of masculine citizenship.

  • by Lucy Riall, Chiara Beccalossi & Valeria P. Babini
    £66.99 - 83.49

    Bringing together an interdisciplinary group of scholars, this volume explores nineteenth-century Italian sexualities from a variety of viewpoints, illuminating in particular personal and political relationships, same-sex desires, gender roles that defy societal norms, sexual behaviours of different classes and transnational encounters.

  • by Sara Read
    £120.99

    In early modern English medicine, the balance of fluids in the body was seen as key to health. Menstruation was widely believed to regulate blood levels in the body and so was extensively discussed in medical texts. Sara Read examines all forms of literature, from plays and poems, to life-writing, and compares these texts with the medical theories.

  • - The Norwegian Missionaries in South-East Africa
    by Kristin Fjelde Tjelle
    £50.99 - 99.49

    What kind of men were missionaries? What kind of masculinity did they represent, in ideology as well as in practice? Presupposing masculinity to be a cluster of cultural ideas and social practices that change over time and space, and not a stable entity with a natural, inherent meaning, Kristin Fjelde Tjelle seeks to answer such questions.

  • - From Northern Woman to Plantation Mistress
    by Rebecca Fraser
    £50.99

    Sarah Hicks Williams was the northern-born wife of an antebellum slaveholder. Rebecca Fraser traces her journey as she relocates to Clifton Grove, the Williams' slaveholding plantation, presenting her with complex dilemmas as she reconciled her new role as plantation mistress to the gender script she had been raised with in the North.

  • - Between Persecution and Freedom, 1945-69
    by Clayton J. Whisnant
    £40.99 - 50.99

    Whisnant argues that the period after Nazism was more important for the history of homosexuality in Germany than is generally recognized. Gay scenes resurfaced; a more masculine view of homosexuality also became prominent. Above all, a public debate about homosexuality emerged, constituting a critical debate within the Sexual Revolution.

  • - An Intellectual History
    by Alison Moore & Peter Cryle
    £99.49

    This first major study of a curiously neglected term in the history of sexuality will intrigue students, scholars and enthusiasts alike. The authors take us through a journey across four centuries, showing how notions of sexual coldness and frigidity have been thought about by legal, medical, psychiatric, psychoanalytic and literary writers.

  • by Andrea Mansker
    £99.49

    A repositioning of French women's struggle for suffrage within the distinct cultural landscape of the masculine honour system. Whether activists demanded admission to the popular ritual of the duel or publicly shamed men for their extramarital sexual behaviour, they appropriated extralegal honour codes to enact new civic and familial identities.

  • - Same-Sex Desires in Italian and British Sexology, c. 1870-1920
    by Chiara Beccalossi
    £99.49

    An examination of how female same-sex desires were represented in a wide range of Italian and British medical writings, 1870-1920. It shows how the psychiatric category of sexual inversion was positioned alongside other medical ideas of same-sex desires, such as the virago, tribade-prostitute, fiamma and gynaecological explanations.

  • by Kate Fisher & Sarah Toulalan
    £50.99

    An examination of how bodies and sexualities have been constructed, categorised, represented, diagnosed, experienced and subverted from the fifteenth to the early twenty-first century. It draws attention to continuities in thinking about bodies and sex: concept may have changed, but hey nevertheless draw on older ideas and language.

  • - Commercial Sex in London, 1885-1960
    by Julia Laite
    £120.99

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  • - Male Homosexuality, Religion and Society
    by J. Meek
    £50.99 - 88.49

    This book examines the experiences of gay and bisexual men who lived in Scotland during an era when all homosexual acts were illegal, tracing the historical relationship between Scottish society, the state and its male homosexual population using a combination of oral history and extensive archival research.

  • - Family Life in Germany, 1939-48
    by Hester Vaizey
    £50.99

    Telling the stories of mothers, fathers and children in their own words, Vaizey recreates the experience of family life in Nazi Germany. From last letters of doomed soldiers at Stalingrad to diaries kept by women trying to keep their families alive in cities under attack, the book vividly describes family life under the most extreme conditions.

  • - Masculinity and the First World War in Britain
    by Jessica Meyer
    £50.99

    Exploring how understandings of masculinity were constructed by British First World war servicemen through examination of their personal narratives, including letters home from the front and wartime diaries. This book presents a nuanced investigation of masculine identity in Britain during and after the First World War.

  • - Queensland and British Columbia in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
    by R. Hogg
    £40.99 - 50.99

    In mid-nineteenth-century Britain, there existed a dominant discourse on what it meant to be a man -denoted by the term 'manliness'. Based on the sociological work of R.W. Connell and others who argue that gender is performative, Robert Hogg asks how British men performed manliness on the colonial frontiers of Queensland and British Columbia.

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