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This book would never have begun were it not for Ian Cornelius’s limitless intellectual curiosity and scholarly range. The project will always owe its first and greatest debt to him and his continued engagement. It also owes a great deal to the support of many institutions and individuals. I received support from Washington University in St. Louis, the Bill and Carol Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry at Emory University, and the Humanities Center at the University of Pittsburgh. I am particularly grateful to Jonathan Arac, Randall Halle, and my fantastic research assistant, Ljudmila Bilkić, at Pitt. I finished this project with the help of the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney and several Wood Institute travel grants from the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. I am thankful for the continued support of Louisiana State University, which has so graciously let me pursue this project across many years and many cities. These travels have fostered and bestowed the precious gift of intellectual friendship. I cannot imagine a better set of readers than Chris Barrett, Michael Bibler, Ross Brooks, Andy Gaedtke, Greta LaFleur, Crystal Lake, Jeff Masten, Elsie Michie, and James Mulholland. They have all helped my introduction and edition enormously. Ivan Crozier’s encyclopedic knowledge of sexology has enriched and deepened this project. Madoka Kishi’s incomparable ability to see the field of sexuality studies in its entirety has helped me conceptualize and envision the project’s largest theoretical stakes. On hearing of this undertaking, Liliane Weissberg immediately suggested Cornell University Press as the perfect venue for its publication, and I continue to be grateful for her wisdom in this matter. The team at Cornell has been wonderful to work with and my editor Kitty Hue-Tsung Liu’s thoughtfulness has been a pleasure. I am grateful to my anonymous readers and my no-longer-anonymous readers, Pete Coviello and Beth Freeman, for their phenomenal suggestions. They have improved the book tremendously.
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