Kinsey and the psychoanalysts: Cross-disciplinary knowledge production inpost-war US sex research

dc.contributor.authorSutton, Katie
dc.date.accessioned2020-10-07T00:11:52Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.date.updated2022-05-08T08:17:48Z
dc.description.abstractThe historical forces of war and migration impacted heavily on the disciplinary locations, practitioners, and structures of sexology and psychoanalysis that had developed in the first decades of the 20th century. By the late 1940s, the US was fast becoming the world centre of each of these prominent fields within the modern human sciences. During these years, the work of Alfred C. Kinsey and his team became synonymous with a distinctly North American brand of empirical sex research. This article offers the most nuanced account to date of the shifting relationship between these two fields in the late 1940s to mid 1950s. It argues that this was more collaborative and mutually influential than previous historians have assumed, even as, following the publication of the first ‘Kinsey report’, tensions grew between the Indiana team and the conservative brand of psychoanalysis that by this stage dominated 1950s North American psychiatry. A keen sense of professional competitiveness accelerated the growing split between these two fields, as Kinsey’s team developed a distinctly modern, technologized brand of statistically oriented sexology that contrasted with the older patient case history, and assumed a very different approach to conservative analysts on ideas of homosexuality and ‘normal’ sexual behaviour. Yet this story of divergence is also tempered through consideration of other aspects of ‘situated knowledge’ such as religion and gender identity, even as accounts of cross-disciplinary competitiveness are expanded by contrasting Kinsey’s positions on psychoanalysis with those of contemporaries such as Harry Benjamin.
dc.description.sponsorshipThe research for this article was enabled by the Australian Research Council Discovery Project ‘Making the Case’ (DP1093819).en_AU
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfen_AU
dc.identifier.issn0952-6951en_AU
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/212346
dc.language.isoen_AUen_AU
dc.provenancehttps://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/9184..."The Accepted Version can be archived in an Institutional Repository" from SHERPA/RoMEO site (as at 13/10/2020). Sutton, Katie. "Kinsey and the psychoanalysts: Cross-disciplinary knowledge production in post-war US sex research." History of the Human Sciences (2020): 0952695120911597.
dc.publisherSage Publications Inc
dc.relationhttp://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP1093819
dc.rights© The Author(s) 2020
dc.sourceHistory of the Human Sciences
dc.subjectFreud
dc.subjectKinsey
dc.subjectpsychoanalysis
dc.subjectsexology
dc.subjectsexuality
dc.titleKinsey and the psychoanalysts: Cross-disciplinary knowledge production inpost-war US sex research
dc.typeJournal article
dcterms.accessRightsOpen Access
local.bibliographicCitation.issue1
local.bibliographicCitation.lastpage28en_AU
local.bibliographicCitation.startpage1en_AU
local.contributor.affiliationSutton, Katie, College of Arts and Social Sciences, ANUen_AU
local.contributor.authoruidSutton, Katie, u5665070en_AU
local.description.notesImported from ARIESen_AU
local.identifier.absfor220206 - History and Philosophy of Science (incl. Non-historical Philosophy of Science)en_AU
local.identifier.absfor200205 - Culture, Gender, Sexualityen_AU
local.identifier.absseo940113 - Gender and Sexualitiesen_AU
local.identifier.ariespublicationu9803255xPUB2684en_AU
local.identifier.citationvolume34
local.identifier.doi10.1177/0952695120911597en_AU
local.identifier.thomsonIDWOS:000532352200001
local.publisher.urlhttp://www.uk.sagepub.com/journals/Journal200813en_AU
local.type.statusAccepted Versionen_AU

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