Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Humanities, Dept. of Modern History, 2003.Bibliography: p. 305-333.Introduction -- Female excess: early medical conceptions of women's erotic desire -- Defining excess in the age of restraint: the modern conception of nymphomania -- Women and nineteenth century medical discourse: conceiving the disordered sex -- Dangerous desires: controlling women's sexual excess -- The urge to cut: treating nymphomania -- Challenging the science of women: rethinking nymphomania -- Sex in mind, sex in body: nymphomania at the end of the Nineteenth century -- Conclusion.In nineteenth-century British medical discourse, nymphomania was understood as a disorder of excessive or insatiable erotic desire. It did not...
This article presents a preliminary study of women’s masturbation in seventeenth-century England, wi...
© 1999 Dr. Joanne TownsendIn this thesis I explore the construction of knowledge about venereal dise...
Between the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth centuries, a number of women we...
The concept of women being overwhelmed by excessive sexual desire had been present in medical discou...
During the mid to late nineteenth century, psychiatrists increasingly focused on women’s sexual devi...
Narratives about female sexual pleasure frequently make recourse to teleological views of historical...
Although the term “female sexual dysfunction” is fairly new, the medicalization of women's sexuality...
The early nineteenth century saw the emergence of institutional psychiatry across Europe. Aware that...
This article examines the ways in which female same-sex desires were represented across a range of n...
This article examines the ways in which female same-sex desires were represented across a range of n...
In this dissertation I analyze Victorian gynecology and literature and argue that texts in both of t...
This dissertation examines the fringe publication of medical and scientific works about sex in the l...
The last decades of the eighteenth century witnessed the emergence of new methods of medical percept...
In the mid-nineteenth century, anatomical illustration in England underwent a crisis of representati...
In this thesis I argue that female masturbation is still in some ways seen as problematic even thoug...
This article presents a preliminary study of women’s masturbation in seventeenth-century England, wi...
© 1999 Dr. Joanne TownsendIn this thesis I explore the construction of knowledge about venereal dise...
Between the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth centuries, a number of women we...
The concept of women being overwhelmed by excessive sexual desire had been present in medical discou...
During the mid to late nineteenth century, psychiatrists increasingly focused on women’s sexual devi...
Narratives about female sexual pleasure frequently make recourse to teleological views of historical...
Although the term “female sexual dysfunction” is fairly new, the medicalization of women's sexuality...
The early nineteenth century saw the emergence of institutional psychiatry across Europe. Aware that...
This article examines the ways in which female same-sex desires were represented across a range of n...
This article examines the ways in which female same-sex desires were represented across a range of n...
In this dissertation I analyze Victorian gynecology and literature and argue that texts in both of t...
This dissertation examines the fringe publication of medical and scientific works about sex in the l...
The last decades of the eighteenth century witnessed the emergence of new methods of medical percept...
In the mid-nineteenth century, anatomical illustration in England underwent a crisis of representati...
In this thesis I argue that female masturbation is still in some ways seen as problematic even thoug...
This article presents a preliminary study of women’s masturbation in seventeenth-century England, wi...
© 1999 Dr. Joanne TownsendIn this thesis I explore the construction of knowledge about venereal dise...
Between the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth centuries, a number of women we...