Archiv für Juni 2016

State formation in seventeenth-century Ireland: the Restoration financial settlement, 1660–62

10.1080/02606755.2016.1192858<br/>Neil Johnston

Erratum

<span class=“paragraphSection“>The book review ‘Nye: The Political Life of Aneurin Bevan by Nicklaus Thomas-Symonds’ by Andrew Seaton, was originally published in the Social History of Medicine, Volume 28, Issue 4, November 2015, pp. <strong><a href=“article.aspx?volume=28&page=928″>928–929<span></span></a></strong>, under the DOI: 10.1093/shm/hkv050.</span>

Erratum

<span class=“paragraphSection“><span style=“font-style:italic;“>The Rise of Child Psychiatry in Portugal: An Intimate Social and Political History, 1915–1959</span></span>

The Art of the Possible. Politics and Governance in Modern British History, 1885–1997: Essays in Memory of Duncan Tanner

10.1080/02606755.2016.1186913<br/>Jim Tomlinson

The ‘Alternative für Deutschland in the Electorate’: Between Single-Issue and Right-Wing Populist Party

10.1080/09644008.2016.1184650<br/>Rüdiger Schmitt-Beck

If You Don’t Know Me by Now: Explaining Local Candidate Recognition

10.1080/09644008.2016.1182502<br/>Heiko Giebler

Global South and North: Why Informality Matters

Journal Name: New Global StudiesVolume: 10Issue: 2Pages: 113-131

The Queer Cases of Psychoanalysis: Rethinking the Scientific Study of Homosexuality, 1890s–1920s *

<span class=“paragraphSection“><div class=“boxTitle“>Abstract</div>This article charts the development of psychoanalytic cases of homosexuality in the early twentieth century against the backdrop of seemingly stable sexological understandings of congenital homosexual identity and behaviour. It argues that psychoanalysts offered alternative models to the taxonomies of sexology, which had remained intellectually tied to discourses of pathology and difference. It contrasts Freud’s approach to homosexuality in several famous early cases, such as ‘Dora’ and Daniel Paul Schreber, with rarely considered cases and writings by Isidor Sadger and others. This analysis reveals nuanced distinctions between early psychoanalytic positions: whereas Freud’s approach created the potential for greater equality between homosexual and heterosexual subjectivities by abolishing straightforward categories of the ‘normal’ and the ‘pathological’, and by arguing for a universal bisexuality and polyvalent sexuality, Sadger and others remained focused on the question of a cure, and continued to prioritize a heterosexual norm. From this early psychoanalytic focus on male homosexual cases, the article traces a shift towards female homosexuality in the interwar period, including consideration of wider environmental and social factors in homosexual development and identification. Throughout, this article considers how the search for authenticity led psychoanalysts to scrutinize the evidentiary status of patient statements rather than take these at face value, opening up new possibilities and frameworks for the representation of queer subjectivities.</span>

German influence on Italian jurists‘ perceptions of the British constitutional model in the late nineteenth century

10.1080/02606755.2016.1192857<br/>Rosamaria Alibrandi

Cosmo Innes and the Defence of Scotland’s Past, c.1825–1875

10.1080/02606755.2016.1187432<br/>James Coleman