A Surgical Temptation: The Demonization of the Foreskin and the Rise of Circumcision in Britain

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University of Chicago Press, 2005 M08 1 - 374 páginas
In the eighteenth century, the Western world viewed circumcision as an embarrassing disfigurement peculiar to Jews. A century later, British doctors urged parents to circumcise their sons as a routine precaution against every imaginable sexual dysfunction, from syphilis and phimosis to masturbation and bed-wetting. Thirty years later the procedure again came under hostile scrutiny, culminating in its disappearance during the 1960s.

Why Britain adopted a practice it had traditionally abhorred and then abandoned it after only two generations is the subject of A Surgical Temptation. Robert Darby reveals that circumcision has always been related to the question of how to control male sexuality. This study explores the process by which the male genitals, and the foreskin especially, were pathologized, while offering glimpses into the lives of such figures as James Boswell, John Maynard Keynes, and W. H. Auden. Examining the development of knowledge about genital anatomy, concepts of health, sexual morality, the rise of the medical profession, and the nature of disease, Darby shows how these factors transformed attitudes toward the male body and its management and played a vital role in the emergence of modern medicine.

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Contenido

Part I The European Background
1
The Willful Organ Meets Fantasy Surgery
3
What a Boy Once Knew about Sex
22
The Masturbation Phobia and the Invention of Spermatorrhea
44
Part II MedicoMoral Politics in Victorian Britain
71
Sexual Morals from the Georgians to the Edwardians
73
Doctors and Disease in an Antisensual Age
94
William Acton and the Case against the Foreskin
118
Finding a Cure for Masturbation
189
The Rise and Fall of Congenital Phimosis
215
Sanitizing the Modern Body
236
Circumcision as a Preventive of Syphilis
260
Circumcision and British Society
285
The End of the Culture of Abstinence
311
Notes
321
References
341

Clitoridectomy and Circumcision in the 1860s
142
Part III The Demonization of the Foreskin
165
Spermatorrhea in British Medical Practice
167

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Página 344 - LEA'S MEDICAL CARPENTER (WILLIAM B.), MD, FRS, &.C., Examiner in Physiology and Comparative Anatomy in the University of London. PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY; with their chief applications to Psychology, Pathology, Therapeutics, Hygiene, and Forensic Medicine.

Acerca del autor (2005)

Robert Darby is an independent medical historian and freelance writer. His most recent books is an abridged edition of George Drysdale’s classic polemic against Victorian morality, Elements of Social Science. He lives in Canberra, Australia. Further information at www.historyofcircumcision.net.

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