| Havelock Ellis - 1915 - 422 sivua
...sexes in the lectureroom or the laboratory or the hospital is discouraged in England and in America. While men are allowed freedom, the sexual field of...develops for women to carry this independence still farther and to find love where they find work. These unquestionable influences of modern movements... | |
| Havelock Ellis - 1915 - 416 sivua
...sexes in the lectureroom or the laboratory or the hospital is discouraged in England and in America. While men are allowed freedom, the sexual field of...develops for women to carry this independence still farther and to find love where they find work. These unquestionable influences of modem, movements... | |
| Havelock Ellis - 1921 - 418 sivua
...sexes in the lectureroom or the laboratory or the hospital is discouraged in England and in America. 'While men are allowed freedom, the sexual field of...develops for women to carry this independence still farther and to find love where they find work. These unquestionable influences of modern movements... | |
| Josephine Donovan - 2010 - 213 sivua
...households, left them exposed to lesbianism, by then perceived as a monstrosity against nature. "[HJaving been taught independence of men and disdain for the...independence still further and to find love where they find work."52 As Nancy Sahli summarized, however, because there was such "pressure against the intense,... | |
| Kathy Lee Peiss, Christina Simmons, Robert A. Padgug - 1989 - 330 sivua
...rise in sexual inversion to the influence of the women's movement. Ellis asserted such a relationship: "Having been taught independence of men and disdain...develops for women to carry this independence still farther and to find love where they find work."73 Ellis had to qualify his argument by noting that... | |
| Josephine Donovan - 1989 - 214 sivua
...monstrosity against nature. "[HJaving been taught independence of men and disdain for the old theory whith placed women in the moated grange of the home to sigh...independence still further and to find love where they fmd work." 5 - As Nancy Sahli summarized, however, because there was such "pressure against the intense,... | |
| Laura L. Behling - 2001 - 232 sivua
...Ellis, even though he subscribed to a congenital theory of inversion, declared in Sexual Inversion, "Having been taught independence of men and disdain...develops for women to carry this independence still farther and to find love where they find work" (262). Their insistence on remaining unmarried, establishing... | |
| Alison Oram, Annmarie Turnbull - 2001 - 324 sivua
...having been raught independence of men and disdain for the old theoty which placed women in the moared grange of the home to sigh for a man who never comes, a rendency develops for women to catty this independence still further and to find love where they find... | |
| Jane Chance - 2005 - 1124 sivua
...the whole, a wholesome and inevitable movement. But it carries with it certain disadvantages. . . . [H]aving been taught independence of men and disdain...grange of the home to sigh for a man who never comes, the tendency develops for women to carry this independence still further and to find love where they... | |
| Euthalia Lisa Panayotidis, Paul James Stortz - 2006 - 449 sivua
...movement. But it carries with it certain disadvantages.'1 The main disadvantage, in his view, was that 'while men are allowed freedom, the sexual field of...develops for women to carry this independence still farther and to find love where they find work.' Ellis was in many ways more liberal in his acceptance... | |
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