Urning - Douglas Pretsell

Urning

Queer Identity in the German Nineteenth Century
Buch | Hardcover
284 Seiten
2024
University of Toronto Press (Verlag)
978-1-4875-5560-3 (ISBN)
85,95 inkl. MwSt
This book profiles men in Germany and beyond who followed Karl Heinrich Ulrichs and adopted his term "urning" as a personal queer identity in the closing decades of the nineteenth century.
In 1864, the German jurist Karl Heinrich Ulrichs coined the term “urning” as a word for same-sex attracted men. Over the next few years, first anonymously and then publicly, he campaigned against the public persecution of these men. In response, some of his readers took on the urning terminology for themselves and engaged with Ulrichs to negotiate the finer points of their new identities.

In Urning, Douglas Pretsell writes of same-sex attracted men in German-speaking Europe who used the neologism “urning” as a personal identity in the late nineteenth century. This was in the period before other terms such as “homosexual” gained currency. Drawing on letters, memoirs, and psychiatric case studies, the book uses first-hand autobiographical accounts to map out the contours of urning society. Urning further explores individual accounts of some urnings who attempted their own forms of activism to transform the world around them , even though they had no formal organization. As the century drew to a close, the efforts of Ulrichs and his urning followers paved the way for the launch of the world’s first  homosexual rights organization. Urning argues that the men who called themselves urnings were self-identified, self-constructed agents of their own destinies.

Douglas Pretsell is a historian at La Trobe University.

Acknowledgments
Notes on Terminology

Introduction: The Age of the Urning Begins

Part One: 1862−1871

1. The First Urning: Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, 1825–1895
2. From Page to Personhood: The Transmission of Urningtum, 1864–1868
3. Two Trials: Sensation, Horror, and the Urning in the Public Sphere, 1867–1870
4. Sins of the City: Karl Maria Kertbeny and the Social Cross-Dressers, 1865–1880

Part Two: 1872–1897

5. The Matchmaker of Switzerland: Jakob Rudolf Forster’s Grassroots Activism in Germanic Switzerland, 1878–1897
6. Queering Psychiatry: Autobiographical Lobbying of Richard von Krafft-Ebing, 1864–1901
7. Belling the Cat: Adolf Glaser’s Discreet Police-Liaison in Berlin, 1878–1897
8. The Comradely Uranian: John Addington Symonds and the English Translation of the Urning, 1889–1893

Conclusion: The End of the Urning Age

Timeline of Events
Bibliography
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort Toronto
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 231 mm
Gewicht 500 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Gender Studies
ISBN-10 1-4875-5560-1 / 1487555601
ISBN-13 978-1-4875-5560-3 / 9781487555603
Zustand Neuware
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