Langage coercitif, pratiques émancipatrices : des lesbiennes sous l’œil de la clinique

At the end of the 19th century, sexology emerged as a scientific field that aimed to diagnose “sexual perversions”, including sapphism, already dealt with, mostly by male writers, in a derogatory manner. For several decades, clinicians will endeavour to understand homosexuality in order to cure it a...

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Main Author: Nicole G. Albert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires du Midi 2018-11-01
Series:Histoire, Médecine et Santé
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/hms/1249
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author Nicole G. Albert
author_facet Nicole G. Albert
author_sort Nicole G. Albert
collection DOAJ
description At the end of the 19th century, sexology emerged as a scientific field that aimed to diagnose “sexual perversions”, including sapphism, already dealt with, mostly by male writers, in a derogatory manner. For several decades, clinicians will endeavour to understand homosexuality in order to cure it as well as to determine whether it was inborn or acquired. They then established frames and categories in which lesbians ultimately would recognize themselves, going so far as to find in such medicalised discourse a way to exist, nay to accept one’s self. I examine that ambivalent phenomenon in the light of a few literary works, i. e. The Well of Loneliness by Radclyffe Hall (1928) and Diana: A Strange Autobiography (1939). In both cases, medical theories are used as a reading grid by their [female] authors as well as by their main characters, namely their alter ego, hence allowing them to claim the naturalness of their desires and of their sexual identity.
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spelling doaj.art-5ff815f0a7914fd0a4ae292eafc1aca32023-02-09T16:10:44ZengPresses universitaires du MidiHistoire, Médecine et Santé2263-89112557-21132018-11-0113132810.4000/hms.1249Langage coercitif, pratiques émancipatrices : des lesbiennes sous l’œil de la cliniqueNicole G. AlbertAt the end of the 19th century, sexology emerged as a scientific field that aimed to diagnose “sexual perversions”, including sapphism, already dealt with, mostly by male writers, in a derogatory manner. For several decades, clinicians will endeavour to understand homosexuality in order to cure it as well as to determine whether it was inborn or acquired. They then established frames and categories in which lesbians ultimately would recognize themselves, going so far as to find in such medicalised discourse a way to exist, nay to accept one’s self. I examine that ambivalent phenomenon in the light of a few literary works, i. e. The Well of Loneliness by Radclyffe Hall (1928) and Diana: A Strange Autobiography (1939). In both cases, medical theories are used as a reading grid by their [female] authors as well as by their main characters, namely their alter ego, hence allowing them to claim the naturalness of their desires and of their sexual identity.http://journals.openedition.org/hms/1249sapphismsexologyvirilizationlesbian identitylesbian novels
spellingShingle Nicole G. Albert
Langage coercitif, pratiques émancipatrices : des lesbiennes sous l’œil de la clinique
Histoire, Médecine et Santé
sapphism
sexology
virilization
lesbian identity
lesbian novels
title Langage coercitif, pratiques émancipatrices : des lesbiennes sous l’œil de la clinique
title_full Langage coercitif, pratiques émancipatrices : des lesbiennes sous l’œil de la clinique
title_fullStr Langage coercitif, pratiques émancipatrices : des lesbiennes sous l’œil de la clinique
title_full_unstemmed Langage coercitif, pratiques émancipatrices : des lesbiennes sous l’œil de la clinique
title_short Langage coercitif, pratiques émancipatrices : des lesbiennes sous l’œil de la clinique
title_sort langage coercitif pratiques emancipatrices des lesbiennes sous l oeil de la clinique
topic sapphism
sexology
virilization
lesbian identity
lesbian novels
url http://journals.openedition.org/hms/1249
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolegalbert langagecoercitifpratiquesemancipatricesdeslesbiennessouslœildelaclinique