ABSTRACT

The Sciences of Homosexuality in Early Modern Europe investigates early modern scientific accounts of same-sex desires and the shapes they assumed in everyday life. It explores the significance of those representations and interpretations from around 1450 to 1750, long before the term homosexuality was coined and accrued its current range of cultural meanings.

This collection establishes that efforts to produce scientific explanations for same-sex desires and sexual behaviours are not a modern invention, but have long been characteristic of European thought. The sciences of antiquity had posited various types of same-sexual affinities rooted in singular natures. These concepts were renewed, elaborated, and reassessed from the late medieval scientific revival to the early Enlightenment. The deviance of such persons seemed outwardly inscribed upon their bodies, documented in treatises and case studies. It was attributed to diverse inborn causes such as distinctive anatomies or physiologies, and embryological, astrological, or temperamental factors.

This original book freshly illuminates many of the questions that are current today about the nature of homosexual activity and reveals how the early modern period and its scientific interpretations of same-sex relationships are fundamental to understanding the conceptual development of contemporary sexuality.

chapter 1|40 pages

Introduction

The prehistory of homosexuality in the early modern sciences

part I|93 pages

Medicine

chapter 2|14 pages

Disorder of body, mind or soul

Male sexual deviance in Jacques Despars's commentary on Avicenna

chapter 4|17 pages

Policing the anus

Stuprum and sodomy according to Paolo Zacchia's forensic medicine

part II|107 pages

Divinatory, speculative and other sciences

chapter 7|28 pages

Sodomizing science

Cocles, Patricio Tricasso, and the constitutional morphologies of Renaissance male same-sex lovers

chapter 10|20 pages

"Bolognan boys are beautiful, tasteful and mostly fine musicians"

Cardano on male same-sex love and music

chapter 11|21 pages

Mercury falling

Gender flexibility and eroticism in popular alchemy

part III|25 pages

Science and sapphisms

chapter 13|14 pages

Erotics versus sexualities

Current science and reading early modern female same-sex relations