Sadism is a concept that is applied to rape-torture and rape-murder as well as the pleasures of consensual sadomasochism. From the 1890s, forensic psychiatrist Richard Von Krafft-Ebing was responsible for popularizing the term. This article explores Krafft-Ebing’s understanding of the “degenerative” sadist and looks at how popular and psychiatric ideas changed over the century. Why did it quickly become a common term in society? Why was sadism regarded as a “perversion” of “normal” male sexuality? In forensic terms, one interesting thing about invention of sadism is why it needed to be coined in the first place. What was it about the sexual that necessitated a different category
This chapter examines the first uses of the word sadism at the end of the nineteenth century and the...
Sexual sadism is assumed to be a crucial factor in sexual homicide. Prevalence estimates vary greatl...
This chapter will seek to contribute to an intellectual history of 'sexuality'. The key word is mark...
Sadism is a concept that is applied to rape-torture and rape-murder as well as the pleasures of cons...
The phenomenon of sexual sadism was first scientifically described by Richard von Krafft-Ebing in 19...
Richard Krafft-Ebing's Psychopathia Sexualis, written in the second half of the 19th century, can be...
The primary focus of the thesis "Sadism and Masochism in Medicalization and Culture During the Last ...
How important is a new word for the development of newly imagined sexual pathology? In the case of t...
Although recent findings suggest sadism as a facet of antisocial personality associated with malevol...
This contribution presents a reconstruction of the way the concepts of sadism and masochism were int...
This is an uncontrolled, descriptive study of 30 sexually sadistic criminals. All were men, and all ...
The notion of sexual sadism emerged from nineteenth-century alienist attempts to imagine the pleasur...
According to Freud, the combination of children being sexual, and perhaps the repeated act of spanki...
Sadism, the desire to inflict pain, and masochism, the craving for pain, can be categorized as forma...
The modern notion of sexuality took shape at the end of the nineteenth century, especially in the wo...
This chapter examines the first uses of the word sadism at the end of the nineteenth century and the...
Sexual sadism is assumed to be a crucial factor in sexual homicide. Prevalence estimates vary greatl...
This chapter will seek to contribute to an intellectual history of 'sexuality'. The key word is mark...
Sadism is a concept that is applied to rape-torture and rape-murder as well as the pleasures of cons...
The phenomenon of sexual sadism was first scientifically described by Richard von Krafft-Ebing in 19...
Richard Krafft-Ebing's Psychopathia Sexualis, written in the second half of the 19th century, can be...
The primary focus of the thesis "Sadism and Masochism in Medicalization and Culture During the Last ...
How important is a new word for the development of newly imagined sexual pathology? In the case of t...
Although recent findings suggest sadism as a facet of antisocial personality associated with malevol...
This contribution presents a reconstruction of the way the concepts of sadism and masochism were int...
This is an uncontrolled, descriptive study of 30 sexually sadistic criminals. All were men, and all ...
The notion of sexual sadism emerged from nineteenth-century alienist attempts to imagine the pleasur...
According to Freud, the combination of children being sexual, and perhaps the repeated act of spanki...
Sadism, the desire to inflict pain, and masochism, the craving for pain, can be categorized as forma...
The modern notion of sexuality took shape at the end of the nineteenth century, especially in the wo...
This chapter examines the first uses of the word sadism at the end of the nineteenth century and the...
Sexual sadism is assumed to be a crucial factor in sexual homicide. Prevalence estimates vary greatl...
This chapter will seek to contribute to an intellectual history of 'sexuality'. The key word is mark...