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4 Of That I Know Many Examples…: On the Relationship of Greek Theory and Roman Practices in Karl Heinrich Ulrichs’s Writings on the Third Sex
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Published:October 2015
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Abstract
Karl Heinrich Ulrichs’s developing thoughts on his ‘Uranian’ sexual identity crystallized in a series of pamphlets which constitute the first full-scale attempt to conceptualize same-sex desire in the nineteenth century. This chapter argues that, while Greece played an important theoretical role in his conceptualization of same-sex desire, Rome had a crucial exemplary function for Ulrichs. From his seminal interpretation of St Paul’s condemnation of homosexual acts as against nature, an interpretation which anticipated current debates in queer theology, to his adoption of the pseudonym Numa Numantius, to his developing understanding of configurations of same-sex desire (such as female homosexuality and the existence of ‘butch’ male Urnings, who upset Ulrichs’s theories about the ‘third sex’ and male effeminacy) that lay outside his own experience, Rome and Roman texts provided Ulrichs with important examples which enabled him to shape his radical ideas about both his own sexual identity and homosexuality more broadly.
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