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The Geography of Perversion: Male-To-Male Sexual Behaviour Outside the West and the Ethnographic Imagination, 1750-1918

The Geography of Perversion: Male-To-Male Sexual Behaviour Outside the West and the Ethnographic Imagination, 1750-1918

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: same-sex desires in foreign cultures defined by Europeans
Review: Besides being an excellent exploration of how European scholars and visitors have defined and understood same-sex passions in other cultures, and how the framework for understanding same-sex passion has changed over the centuries, the book is also an excellent English language source for many obscure passages here-to-fore only available in German, French or Italian. Not for the casual reader, but for someone who has already down some reading on the subject, The Geography of Perversion is indispensible.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Thorough, Important, But a Challenging Read
Review: Rudi C. Bleys' Geography of Perversion covers the entire globe, two centuries and hundreds of original sources. It is a very thorough study concerning the examination of the way the West (whether travelers, colonizers, conquerors or anthropologists, and often a combination of these) viewed the peoples with which it came into contact. The examples ranged from Japan and China to the Americas to Africa and into the Middle East. It was fascinating to see how the perceptions changed over time, not because of changes in these countries but because of the needs of the West. The book is a very challenging read and is probably not suited for the casual reader of history or gay studies and it often had the feel of PhD thesis. It is an important work, though, that can be rewarding for the serious reader.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Thorough, Important, But a Challenging Read
Review: Rudi C. Bleys' Geography of Perversion covers the entire globe, two centuries and hundreds of original sources. It is a very thorough study concerning the examination of the way the West (whether travelers, colonizers, conquerors or anthropologists, and often a combination of these) viewed the peoples with which it came into contact. The examples ranged from Japan and China to the Americas to Africa and into the Middle East. It was fascinating to see how the perceptions changed over time, not because of changes in these countries but because of the needs of the West. The book is a very challenging read and is probably not suited for the casual reader of history or gay studies and it often had the feel of PhD thesis. It is an important work, though, that can be rewarding for the serious reader.


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