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The Book of Minor Perverts: Sexology, Etiology, and the Emergences of Sexuality, by Benjamin Kahan

Barry Reay assesses a book charting the complexities of the history of sexuality

Published on
August 29, 2019
Last updated
August 29, 2019
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鈥淭he German professors have catalogued thousands of people whose whole pleasure consists in eating dung,鈥 a character in Aldous Huxley鈥檚 novel 础苍迟颈肠听贬补测 observed satirically in 1923. 鈥淎h! but some people like blood. And some like boots. And some like gloves and corsets. And some like birchrods. And some like sliding down slopes and can鈥檛 look at Michelangelo鈥檚 鈥楴ight鈥 on the Medici Tombs without dying the little death [having an orgasm], because the statue seems to be sliding.鈥 Although Huxley is not mentioned in The聽Book of Minor Perverts, he was playing, mischievously, with the subject of Benjamin Kahan鈥檚 new book.

The title comes from Michel Foucault鈥檚 observation that the emergence of homosexuality as a sexological category in the 19th century (the 鈥渟odomite had been a temporary aberration; the homosexual was now a species鈥) was accompanied by what the famous French philosopher called a constellation of 鈥渕inor perverts鈥, a 鈥渢housand aberrant sexualities鈥. But Kahan鈥檚 subject is not so much sadism, masochism or fetishism, the main forms of 鈥減erversion鈥 named at the same time as homosexuality. Nor, despite its back-cover blurb, does The聽Book of Minor Perverts tell us a great deal about actual minor perverts: there is precious little on 鈥渟tatue-fondlers鈥, for instance. Rather, Kahan uses these minor sexualities (although 鈥渟exuality鈥 is probably not the right term) to rethink the genesis and history of homosexuality. His argument is that the formation of homosexuality and the homo/hetero divide was by no means as coherent and monolithic as many historians and critics would have it. He is interested in what he terms the 鈥渓ateness of sexuality鈥, 鈥渢he long process of coordination and solidification as sexuality congeals unevenly into the homo/hetero binary鈥. He skilfully explores what he terms the 鈥渄efinitional incoherence of homosexuality鈥, demonstrating, for example, that whether homosexuality is congenital or acquired has been a long-standing debate.

It is a mainly a book about homosexuality, then. There are chapters on situational homosexuality, acts without a necessary sense of identity (chapter聽1), climatic, humoral, and germ theories of homosexuality (chapter聽2), and speculations about the causal relationship between alcohol and homosexuality (chapter聽5). But, as the reference to the homo/hetero binary implies, it is also a book about the emergence of sexuality. Kahan鈥檚 project is to reinstitute what he calls the 鈥渕ultiplicity of past configurations of sexuality鈥. Hence, there are chapters on the role of the occult in the formation of sexuality (chapter聽3) and on the relationship between industrialisation and sex (chapter聽4), and a brilliant afterword that draws innovatively and generously both on the work of others (this author included) and Kahan鈥檚 own close readings to attempt a mapping of a new history of sexual formations.

The book is not without its weaknesses. Kahan has criticised 鈥渋nattention to the literary鈥 in discussions of sexology, so there is a great deal of analysis of sometimes rather obscure literary texts when greater consideration of sexology鈥檚 range and an employment of other source material might have made the same argument more effectively. There also seems to be relatively little analysis of heterosexuality 鈥 ironic, given that some of the early sexologists used the word to denote a kind of perversion!

Barry Reay is Keith Sinclair professor of history at the University of Auckland and the author, most recently, of Sex in the Archives: Writing the Histories of American Sex (2018).


The Book of Minor Perverts: Sexology, Etiology, and the Emergences of Sexuality
By Benjamin Kahan
University of Chicago Press
240pp, 拢68.00 and 拢23.00
ISBN 9780226607818 and 9780226607955
Published 19 February 2019

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Print headline: The blossoming of new passions

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Reader's comments (1)

I would have immediate doubts about a book whose title contained the plural form "emergences".

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