|
By Trevor |
A pioneering figure in 19th century efforts to advance public understandings of same-sex relations, Karl Heinrich Ulrichs published a series of essays in 1862 arguing for the equal treatment of "Urnings" -- or men who engage in "Man-manly love." This was somewhat similar to a proto-homosexual, but Ulrichs describes urnings as something of a third sex -- a man's body with a woman's sensibilities. My favorite and unintentionally hilarious quote from this text:
Our sexual drive is one that demands periodical satisfaction, be it complete, be it incomplete. The latter consists of petting and absorbing that magnetic current that flows from the body of a young man, which is transmitted to us through physical contact with him.
The legal institution of marriage is not the institution for us. There is not priest or justice of the peace who would bind in marriage one of us and our beloved. Therefore, the natural state of the species exists for us, as it does fro the birds in the sky and the animals in the field; ie., marriage cannot be the prerequisite of a moral license for gratification in any relationship, at least as long as priests and justices of the peace are lacking. -- Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, "The Riddle of Man-Manly Love: The Pioneering Work on Male Homosexuality" (1994 / 1862), p. 40.
Here here, old boy! LOL. Seriously, the essay is pretty amazing. Click here to download a PDF of it!
|
Wonderful quote.
I did a Google Book search for "legal institution of marriage" and it shows a snippet of page 40 in the book by Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, "The riddle of "man-manly love": the pioneering work on male homosexuality," Prometheus Books, 1994, Original from the University of Michigan, Digitized Jul 20, 2009 by Google Books. I was amused to see the highlighted text in the scanned copy.
I haven't checked, but I wonder if Google has the original German public domain copy of this book available for download as they do the book by Dr. med. Magnus Hirschfeld, Arzt für nervöse und psychische Leiden in Berlin, "Die Homosexualität des Mannes und des Weibes," Louis Marcus Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1914, First Edition, Original from Princeton University scanned by Google Books. (download PDF of the first German edition from Google Books) See English language translation by Magnus Hirschfeld, translated by Michael A. Lombardi-Nash, Ph.D., "The homosexuality of men and women," Prometheus Books, 2000. Lombardi-Nash was also the German to English translator for Ulrich's book.
I just started reading Hirschfeld's book, which discusses Ulrichs' urning term, and I posted my first notes on my blog page Magnus Hirschfeld book notes 1 (1/20/10).
I found the Google Books PDF of the original German book with Ulrichs marriage quote. I've included links and a JPG image of it in my blog post Marriage not for gays - 1864 Karl Heinrich Ulrichs (1/23/10).