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Havelock Ellis

Henry Havelock Ellis (2 February 1859 – 8 July 1939) was an English physician, eugenicist, writer, progressive intellectual and social reformer who studied human sexuality. He co-wrote the first medical textbook in English on homosexuality in 1897, and also published works on a variety of sexual practices and inclinations, as well as on transgender psychology. He is credited[by whom?] with introducing the notions of narcissism and autoeroticism, later adopted by psychoanalysis.

Havelock Ellis
Ellis in 1913
Born
Henry Havelock Ellis

(1859-02-02)2 February 1859
Died8 July 1939(1939-07-08) (aged 80)
Alma materKing's College London
Occupations
  • Physician
  • eugenicist
  • writer
Years active1879−1931
Spouse
(m. 1891; died 1916)

Ellis was among the pioneering investigators of psychedelic drugs and the author of one of the first written reports to the public about an experience with mescaline, which he conducted on himself in 1896. He supported eugenics and served as one of 16 vice-presidents of the Eugenics Society from 1909 to 1912.[1]

Early life and career

Ellis, son of Edward Peppen Ellis and Susannah Mary Wheatley, was born in Croydon, Surrey (now part of Greater London). He had four sisters, none of whom married. His father was a sea captain and an Anglican,[2] while his mother was the daughter of a sea captain who had many other relatives that lived on or near the sea. When he was seven his father took him on one of his voyages, during which they called at Sydney, Australia; Callao, Peru; and Antwerp, Belgium. After his return, Ellis attended the French and German College near Wimbledon, and afterward attended a school in Mitcham.

In April 1875, Ellis sailed on his father's ship for Australia; soon after his arrival in Sydney, he obtained a position as a master at a private school. After the discovery of his lack of training, he was fired and became a tutor for a family living a few miles from Carcoar, New South Wales. He spent a year there and then obtained a position as a master at a grammar school in Grafton, New South Wales. The headmaster had died and Ellis carried on at the school for that year, but was unsuccessful.

At the end of the year, he returned to Sydney and, after three months' training, was given charge of two government part-time elementary schools, one at Sparkes Creek, near Scone, New South Wales, and the other at Junction Creek. He lived at the school house on Sparkes Creek for a year. He wrote in his autobiography, "In Australia, I gained health of body, I attained peace of soul, my life task was revealed to me, I was able to decide on a professional vocation, I became an artist in literature; these five points covered the whole activity of my life in the world. Some of them I should doubtless have reached without the aid of the Australian environment, scarcely all, and most of them I could never have achieved so completely if chance had not cast me into the solitude of the Liverpool Range."[3]

Medicine and psychology

Ellis returned to England in April 1879. He had decided to take up the study of sex and felt his first step must be to qualify as a physician. He studied at St Thomas's Hospital Medical School, now part of King's College London, but never had a regular medical practice. His training was aided by a small legacy[4] and also income earned from editing works in the Mermaid Series of lesser known Elizabethan and Jacobean drama.[4] He joined The Fellowship of the New Life in 1883, meeting other social reformers Eleanor Marx, Edward Carpenter and George Bernard Shaw.

The 1897 English translation of Ellis's book Sexual Inversion, co-authored with John Addington Symonds and originally published in German in 1896, was the first English medical textbook on homosexuality.[5][6] It describes male homosexual relations as well as adolescent rape. Ellis wrote the first objective study of homosexuality, as he did not characterise it as a disease, immoral, or a crime. The work assumes that same-sex love transcended age taboos as well as gender taboo. The work also uses the term bisexual throughout[7].The first edition of the book was bought-out by the executor of Symond's estate, who forbade any mention of Symonds in the second edition.[8]

In 1897 a bookseller was prosecuted for stocking Ellis's book. Although the term homosexual is attributed to Ellis,[citation needed] he wrote in 1897, "'Homosexual' is a barbarously hybrid word, and I claim no responsibility for it."[9] In fact, the word homosexual was coined in 1868 by the Hungarian author Karl-Maria Kertbeny.[10]

Ellis may have developed psychological concepts of autoeroticism and narcissism, both of which were later developed further by Sigmund Freud.[11] Ellis's influence may have reached Radclyffe Hall, who would have been about 17 years old at the time Sexual Inversion was published. She later referred to herself as a sexual invert and wrote of female "sexual inverts" in Miss Ogilvy Finds Herself and The Well of Loneliness. When Ellis bowed out as the star witness in the trial of The Well of Loneliness on 14 May 1928, Norman Haire was set to replace him but no witnesses were called.[12]

Eonism

Ellis studied what today are called transgender phenomena. Together with Magnus Hirschfeld, Havelock Ellis is considered a major figure in the history of sexology to establish a new category that was separate and distinct from homosexuality.[13] Aware of Hirschfeld's studies of transvestism, but disagreeing with his terminology, in 1913 Ellis proposed the term sexo-aesthetic inversion to describe the phenomenon. In 1920 he coined the term eonism, which he derived from the name of a historical figure, the Chevalier d'Éon. Ellis explained:[14]

On the psychic side, as I view it, the Eonist is embodying, in an extreme degree, the aesthetic attitude of imitation of, and identification with, the admired object. It is normal for a man to identify himself with the woman he loves. The Eonist carries that identification too far, stimulated by a sensitive and feminine element in himself which is associated with a rather defective virile sexuality on what may be a neurotic basis.

Ellis found eonism to be "a remarkably common anomaly", and "next in frequency to homosexuality among sexual deviations", and categorized it as "among the transitional or intermediate forms of sexuality". As in the Freudian tradition, Ellis postulated that a "too close attachment to the mother" may encourage eonism, but also considered that it "probably invokes some defective endocrine balance".[14]

Marriage

 
Edith Lees and Havelock Ellis

In November 1891, at the age of 32, and reportedly still a virgin, Ellis married the English writer and proponent of women's rights Edith Lees. From the beginning, their marriage was unconventional, as Edith Lees was openly bisexual.[citation needed] At the end of the honeymoon, Ellis went back to his bachelor rooms in Paddington. She lived at Fellowship House. Their "open marriage" was the central subject in Ellis's autobiography, My Life. Ellis reportedly had an affair with Margaret Sanger.[15]

According to Ellis in My Life, his friends were much amused at his being considered an expert on sex. Some knew that he reportedly suffered from impotence until the age of 60. He then discovered that he could become aroused by the sight of a woman urinating. Ellis named this "undinism". After his wife died, Ellis formed a relationship with a French woman, Françoise Lafitte.

Eugenics

Ellis was a supporter of eugenics. He served as vice-president to the Eugenics Education Society and wrote on the subject, among others, in The Task of Social Hygiene:

Eventually, it seems evident, a general system, whether private or public, whereby all personal facts, biological and mental, normal and morbid, are duly and systematically registered, must become inevitable if we are to have a real guide as to those persons who are most fit, or most unfit to carry on the race.

The superficially sympathetic man flings a coin to the beggar; the more deeply sympathetic man builds an almshouse for him so he need no longer beg; but perhaps the most radically sympathetic of all is the man who arranges that the beggar shall not be born.

In his early writings, it was clear that Ellis concurred with the notion that there was a system of racial hierarchies, and that non-western cultures were considered to be "lower races".[16] Before explicitly talking about eugenic topics, he used the prevalence of homosexuality in these 'lower races' to indicate the universality of the behavior. In his work, Sexual Inversions, where Ellis presented numerous cases of homosexuality in Britain, he was always careful to mention the race of the subject and the health of the person's 'stock', which included their neuropathic conditions and the health of their parents. However, Ellis was clear to assert that he did not feel that homosexuality was an issue that eugenics needed to actively deal with, as he felt that once the practice was accepted in society, those with homosexual tendencies would comfortably choose not to marry, and thus would cease to pass the 'homosexual heredity' along.[16]

In a debate in the Sociological Society, Ellis corresponded with the eugenicist Francis Galton, who was presenting a paper in support of marriage restrictions. While Galton analogized eugenics to breeding domesticated animals, Ellis felt that a greater sense of caution was needed before applying the eugenic regulations to populations, as "we have scarcely yet realized how subtle and far-reaching hereditary influences are."[16] Instead, because unlike domesticated animals, humans were in charge of who they mated with, Ellis argued that a greater emphasis was needed on public education about how vital this issue was. Ellis thus held much more moderate views than many contemporary eugenicists. In fact, Ellis also fundamentally disagreed with Galton's leading ideas that procreation restrictions were the same as marriage restrictions.[17] Ellis believed that those who should not procreate should still be able to gain all the other benefits of marriage, and to not allow that was an intolerable burden. This, in his mind, was what led to eugenics being "misunderstood, ridiculed, and regarded as a fad".[17]

Throughout his life, Ellis was both a member and later a council member of the Eugenics Society. Moreover, he played a role on the General Committee of the First International Eugenics Congress.[16]

Sexual impulse in youth

Ellis' 1933 book, Psychology of Sex, is one of the many manifestations of his interest in human sexuality. In this book, he goes into vivid detail of how children can experience sexuality differently in terms of time and intensity. He mentions that it was previously believed that, in childhood, humans had no sex impulse at all. "If it is possible to maintain that the sex impulse has no normal existence in early life, then every manifestation of it at that period must be 'perverse,'" he adds.

He continues by stating that, even in the early development and lower functional levels of the genitalia, there is a wide range of variation in terms of sexual stimulation. He claims that the ability of some infants producing genital reactions, seen as "reflex signs of irritation" are typically not vividly remembered. Since the details of these manifestations are not remembered, there is no possible way to determine them as pleasurable. However, Ellis claims that many people of both sexes can recall having agreeable sensations with the genitalia as a child. "They are not (as is sometimes imagined) repressed." They are, however, not usually mentioned to adults. Ellis argues that they typically stand out and are remembered for the sole contrast of the intense encounter to any other ordinary experience.[18]

Ellis claims that sexual self-excitement is known to happen at an early age. He references authors like Marc, Fonssagrives, and Perez in France, who published their findings in the nineteenth century. These "early ages" are not strictly limited to ages close to puberty, as can be seen in their findings. These authors provide cases for children of both sexes who have masturbated from the age of three or four. Ellis references Robie's findings that boys' first sex feelings appear between the ages of five and fourteen. For girls, this age ranges from eight to nineteen.

For both sexes, these first sexual experiences arise more frequently during the later years as opposed to the earlier years.[19] Ellis then references G.V. Hamilton's studies that found twenty percent of males and fourteen percent of females have pleasurable experiences with their sex organs before the age of six. This is only supplemented by Ellis' reference to Katharine Davis' studies, which found that twenty to twenty-nine percent of boys and forty-nine to fifty-one percent of girls were masturbating by the age of eleven. However, in the next three years after, boys' percentages exceeded those of girls.

Ellis also contributed to the idea of varying levels of sexual excitation. He asserts it is a mistake to assume all children are able to experience genital arousal or pleasurable erotic sensations. He proposes cases where an innocent child is led to believe that stimulation of the genitalia will result in a pleasurable erection. Some of these children may fail and not be able to experience this, either pleasure or an erection, until puberty. Ellis concludes, then, that children are capable of a "wide range of genital and sexual aptitude". Ellis even considers ancestry as a contributions to different sexual excitation levels, stating that children of "more unsound heredity" and/or hypersexual parents are "more precociously excitable".[19]

Auto-eroticism

Ellis' views of auto-eroticism were very comprehensive, including much more than masturbation. Auto-eroticism, according to Ellis, includes a wide range of phenomena. Ellis states in his 1897 book Studies in the Psychology of Sex, that auto-eroticism ranges from erotic day-dreams, marked by a passivity shown by the subject, to "unshamed efforts at sexual self-manipulation witnessed among the insane".[20]

Ellis also argues that auto-erotic impulses can be heightened by bodily processes like menstrual flow. During this time, he says, women, who would otherwise not feel a strong propensity for auto-eroticism, increase their masturbation patterns. This trend is absent, however, in women without a conscious acceptance of their sexual feelings and in a small percentage of women suffering from a sexual or general ailment which result in a significant amount of "sexual anesthesia".[21]

Ellis also raises social concern over how auto-erotic tendencies affect marriages. He goes on to tying auto-eroticism to declining marriage rates. As these rates decline, he concludes that auto-eroticism will only increase in both amount and intensity for both men and women. Therefore, he states, this is an important issue to both the moralist and physician to investigate psychological underpinnings of these experiences and determine an attitude toward them.[22]

Smell

Ellis believed that the sense of smell, although ineffective at long ranges, still contributes to sexual attraction, and therefore, to mate selection. In his 1905 book, Sexual selection in man, Ellis makes a claim for the sense of smell in the role of sexual selection.[23] He asserts that while we have evolved out of a great necessity for the sense of smell, we still rely on our sense of smell with sexual selection. The contributions that smell makes in sexual attraction can even be heightened with certain climates. Ellis states that with warmer climates come a heightened sensitivity to sexual and other positive feelings of smell among normal populations. Because of this, he believes people are often delighted by odors in the East, particularly in India, in "Hebrew and Mohammedan lands". Ellis then continues by describing the distinct odours in various races, noting that the Japanese race has the least intense of bodily odours.[24] Ellis concludes his argument by stating, "On the whole, it may be said that in the usual life of man odours play a not inconsiderable part and raise problems which are not without interest, but that their demonstrable part in actual sexual selection is comparatively small."[25]

Views on women and birth control

Ellis favoured feminism from a eugenic perspective, feeling that the enhanced social, economic, and sexual choices that feminism provided for women would result in women choosing partners who were more eugenically sound.[16] In his view, intelligent women would not choose, nor be forced to marry and procreate with feeble-minded men.

Ellis viewed birth control as merely the continuation of an evolutionary progression, noting that natural progress has always consisted of increasing impediments to reproduction, which lead to a lower quantity of offspring, but a much higher quality of them.[17] From a eugenic perspective, birth control was an invaluable instrument for the elevation of the race.[17] However, Ellis noted that birth control could not be used randomly in a way that could have a detrimental impact by reducing conception, but rather needed to be used in a targeted manner to improve the qualities of certain 'stocks'. He observed that it was the 'superior stocks' who had knowledge of and used birth control while the 'inferior stocks' propagated without checks.[17] Ellis's solution to this was a focus on contraceptives in education, as this would disseminate the knowledge in the populations that he felt needed them the most. Ellis argued that birth control was the only available way of making eugenic selection practicable, as the only other option was wide-scale abstention from intercourse for those who were 'unfit'.[17]

Views on sterilization

Ellis was strongly opposed to the idea of castration of either sex for eugenic purposes. In 1909, regulations were introduced at the Cantonal Asylum in Bern which allowed those deemed 'unfit' and with strong sexual inclinations to be mandatorily sterilized.[26] In a particular instance, several men and women, including epileptics and paedophiles, were castrated, some of whom voluntarily requested it. While the results were positive, in that none of the subjects were found guilty of any more sexual offences, Ellis remained staunchly opposed to the practice.[26] His view on the origin of these inclinations was that sexual impulses do not reside in the sexual organs, but rather they persist in the brain.[26] Moreover, he posited that the sexual glands provided an important source of internal secretions vital for the functioning of the organism, and thus the glands' removal could greatly injure the patient.[26]

However, already in his time, Ellis was witness to the rise of vasectomies and ligatures of the Fallopian tubes, which performed the same sterilization without removing the whole organ. In these cases, Ellis was much more favourable, yet still maintaining that "sterilization of the unfit, if it is to be a practical and humane measure commanding general approval, must be voluntary on the part of the person undergoing it, and never compulsory."[26] His opposition to such a system was not only rooted in morality. Rather, Ellis also considered the practicality of the situation, hypothesizing that if an already mentally unfit man is forced to undergo sterilization, he would only become more ill-balanced, and would end up committing more anti-social acts.

Though Ellis was never at ease with the idea of forced sterilizations, he was willing to find ways to circumvent that restriction. His focus was on the social ends of eugenics, and as a means to it, Ellis was in no way against 'persuading' 'volunteers' to undergo sterilization by withdrawing Poor Relief from them.[17] While he preferred to convince those he deemed unfit using education, Ellis supported coercion as a tool. Furthermore, he supported adding ideas about eugenics and birth control to the education system in order to restructure society, and to promote social hygiene.[27] For Ellis, sterilization seemed to be the only eugenic instrument that could be used on the mentally unfit. In fact, in his publication The Sterilization of the Unfit, Ellis argued that even institutionalization could not guarantee the complete prevention of procreation between the unfit, and thus, "the burdens of society, to say nothing of the race, are being multiplied. It is not possible to view sterilization with enthusiasm when applied to any class of people…but what, I ask myself, is the practical alternative?"[26]

Psychedelics

Ellis was among the pioneering investigators of psychedelic drugs and the author of one of the first written reports to the public about an experience with mescaline, which he conducted on himself in 1896. He consumed a brew made of three Lophophora williamsii buds in the afternoon of Good Friday alone in his set of rooms in Temple, London. During the experience, lasting for about 24 hours, he noted a plethora of extremely vivid, complex, colourful, pleasantly smelling hallucinations, consisting both of abstract geometrical patterns and objects such as butterflies and other insects. He published the account of the experience in The Contemporary Review in 1898 (Mescal: A New Artificial Paradise).[28] The title of the article alludes to an earlier work on the effects of mind-altering substances, an 1860 book Les Paradis artificiels by French poet Charles Baudelaire (containing descriptions of experiments with opium and hashish).

Ellis was so impressed with the aesthetic quality of the experience that he gave some specimens of peyote to the Irish poet W.B. Yeats, a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, an organisation of which another mescaline researcher, Aleister Crowley, was also a member.[29]

Later life and death

 
Commemorative plaque dedicated to Ellis and his wife at Golders Green Crematorium

Ellis resigned from his position as a Fellow of the Eugenics Society over its stance on sterilization in January 1931.[30]

Ellis spent the last year of his life at Hintlesham, Suffolk, where he died in July 1939.[31] His ashes were scattered at Golders Green Crematorium, North London, following his cremation.[32]

Works

 
Inmate of Elmira Reformatory showing four views of head The Criminal (1890)
  • The Criminal (1890)
  • The New Spirit (1890)
  • The Nationalisation of Health (1892)
  • Man and Woman: A Study of Secondary and Tertiary Sexual Characteristics (1894) (revised 1929)
  • Das konträre Geschlechtsgefühl (in German). Leipzig: Wigand. 1896. p. 1. with J.A. Symonds
  • Studies in the Psychology of Sex (1897–1928) six volumes (listed below)
  • Studies in the Psychology of Sex. Vol. 1 The Evolution of Modesty, The Phenomena of Sexual Periodicity, Auto–Erotism. 1897.
  • Affirmations (1898)
  • "Mescal: A New Artificial Paradise". The Contemporary Review. LXXIII. 1898.
  • The Nineteenth Century (1900)
  • Studies in the Psychology of Sex. Vol. 2 Sexual Inversion. 1900.
  • Studies in the Psychology of Sex. Vol. 3 Analysis of the Sexual Impulse, Love and Pain, The Sexual Impulse in Women. 1903.
  • A Study of British Genius (1904)
  • Studies in the Psychology of Sex. Vol. 4 Sexual Selection in Man. 1905.
  • Studies in the Psychology of Sex. Vol. 5 Erotic Symbolism, The Mechanism of Detumescence, The Psychic State in Pregnancy. 1906.
  • The Soul of Spain (1908)
  • "The sterilisation of the unfit". The Eugenics Review. 1 (3): 203–06. 1909. PMC 2986668. PMID 21259474.
  • Studies in the Psychology of Sex. Vol. 6 Sex in Relation to Society. 1910.
  • The Problem of Race-Regeneration (1911)
  • The World of Dreams (1911) (new edition 1926)
  • The task of social hygiene. New York. 1912. p. 10.
  • "Birth control and eugenics". The Eugenics Review. 9 (1): 32–41. 1917. PMC 2942166. PMID 21259632.
  • The Task of Social Hygiene (1912)
  • Essays in War-Time. February 2006.
  • The Philosophy of Conflict (1919)
  • On Life and Sex: Essays of Love and Virtue (1921)
  • Kanga Creek: an Australian Idyll. The Golden Cockerel press. 1922.
  • Little Essays of Love and Virtue (1922)
  • The Dance of Life. 1923.
  • Impressions and Comments. Vol. 3. 1924.
  • Sonnets, with Folk Songs from the Spanish (1925)
  • Eonism and Other Supplementary Studies (1928)
  • Studies in the Psychology of Sex Vol. 7 (1928)
  • The Art of Life (1929) (selected and arranged by Mrs. S. Herbert)
  • More Essays of Love and Virtue (1931)
  • ed.: James Hinton: Life in Nature (1931)
  • Views and Reviews. 1932.
  • Psychology of Sex. 1933.
  • ed.: Imaginary Conversations and Poems: A Selection, by Walter Savage Landor (1933)
  • Chapman (1934)
  • My Confessional (1934)
  • Questions of Our Day (1934)
  • From Rousseau to Proust (1935)
  • Selected Essays (1936)
  • Poems (1937) (selected by John Gawsworth; pseudonym of T. Fytton Armstrong)
  • Love and Marriage (1938) (with others)
  • My life. Houghton Mufflin. 1939.
  • Sex Compatibility in Marriage (1939)
  • From Marlowe to Shaw (1950) (ed. by J. Gawsworth)
  • The Genius of Europe (1950)
  • Sex and Marriage (1951) (ed. by J. Gawsworth)
  • The Unpublished Letters of Havelock Ellis to Joseph Ishill (1954)

Translations

  • Germinal (by Zola) (1895) (reissued 1933)
  • The Psychology of the Emotions by Théodule-Armand Ribot (1897)

References

  1. ^ The Eugenics Review (PDF), The Eugenics Education Society, 1913, PMC 2986818, retrieved 4 October 2021
  2. ^ "Havelock Ellis". 1930.
  3. ^ Ellis 1939, p. 139.
  4. ^ a b Thomson 1968, p. 210.
  5. ^ Ellis & Symonds 1896.
  6. ^ White 1999, p. 66.
  7. ^ Storr, Meryl (1999). Storr, Merl (ed.). Bisexuality: A Critical Reader. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203024676. ISBN 9780203024676.
  8. ^ Duberman, Martin Bauml; Vicinus, Martha; Chauncey, Jr., George, eds. (1990). Hidden from History: Reclaiming the Gay & Lesbian Past. New American Library. p. 1. ISBN 9780452010673.
  9. ^ "homosexual (adj.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  10. ^ Greenberg, Gary (2007). "Gay by Choice? The Science of Sexual Identity". Mother Jones.
  11. ^ Laplanche & Pontalis 1988, p. 45.
  12. ^ Souhami 1998, p. 197.
  13. ^ Ekins & King 2006, pp. 61–64.
  14. ^ a b Ellis, Albert (2008) [1933]. Psychology of Sex. ISBN 978-1443735322.
  15. ^ "The Margaret Sanger Papers Project". Division of Libraries at New York University.
  16. ^ a b c d e Crozier 2008.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Ellis 1917, p. 35.
  18. ^ Ellis 1933, pp. 70–71.
  19. ^ a b Ellis 1933, p. 71.
  20. ^ Ellis 1897, pp. 98–99.
  21. ^ Ellis 1897, p. 64.
  22. ^ Ellis 1897, p. 99.
  23. ^ Ellis 1905, p. 110.
  24. ^ Ellis 1905, p. 111.
  25. ^ Ellis 1905, p. 112.
  26. ^ a b c d e f Ellis 1909, p. 203.
  27. ^ Ellis 1912, p. 10.
  28. ^ Ellis 1898.
  29. ^ Rudgley 1993.
  30. ^ Wyndham 2012, p. 242.
  31. ^ "Ellis, Author of Sex Books, Is Dead at 80". The Times. Hammond, Indiana. p. 35 col A.
  32. ^ Wilson 2016, p. 225.

Bibliography

  • Crozier, Ivan (2008). "Havelock Ellis, eugenicist". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences. 39 (2): 187–94. doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2008.03.002. ISSN 1369-8486. PMID 18534349.
  • Ekins, Richard; King, Dave (2006). The Transgender Phenomenon. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0761971634.
  • Grosskurth, Phyllis (1980). Havelock Ellis: A Biography. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0713910711.
  • Laplanche, Jean; Pontalis, Jean-Bertrand (1988). The Language of Psycho-analysis. Karnac Books. ISBN 978-0946439492.
  • Rudgley, Richard (1993). The alchemy of culture: intoxicants in society. British Museum Press. ISBN 978-0714117362.
  • Souhami, Diana (1998). The Trials of Radclyffe Hall. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0297818250.
  • Thomson, Robert (1968). The Pelican History of Psychology (First ed.). Pelican. p. 463. ISBN 978-0140209044.
  • White, Chris (1999). Nineteenth-Century Writings on Homosexuality. CRC Press. p. 66.
  • Wilson, Scott (2016). Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed. McFarland. ISBN 978-1476625997.
  • Wyndham, Diana (2012). Norman Haire and the Study of Sex. Sydney University Press. ISBN 978-1743320068.

Further reading

External links

  •   Media related to Havelock Ellis at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Works by or about Havelock Ellis at Wikisource
  •   Quotations related to Havelock Ellis at Wikiquote
  • Havelock Ellis papers (MS 195). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Havelock Ellis". Books and Writers
  • Henry Havelock Ellis papers from the Historic Psychiatry Collection, Menninger Archives, Kansas Historical Society
  • Works by Havelock Ellis at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Havelock Ellis at Internet Archive
  • Works by Havelock Ellis at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

havelock, ellis, henry, february, 1859, july, 1939, english, physician, eugenicist, writer, progressive, intellectual, social, reformer, studied, human, sexuality, wrote, first, medical, textbook, english, homosexuality, 1897, also, published, works, variety, . Henry Havelock Ellis 2 February 1859 8 July 1939 was an English physician eugenicist writer progressive intellectual and social reformer who studied human sexuality He co wrote the first medical textbook in English on homosexuality in 1897 and also published works on a variety of sexual practices and inclinations as well as on transgender psychology He is credited by whom with introducing the notions of narcissism and autoeroticism later adopted by psychoanalysis Havelock EllisEllis in 1913BornHenry Havelock Ellis 1859 02 02 2 February 1859Croydon Surrey UKDied8 July 1939 1939 07 08 aged 80 Hintlesham Suffolk UKAlma materKing s College LondonOccupationsPhysicianeugenicistwriterYears active1879 1931SpouseEdith Ellis m 1891 died 1916 wbr Ellis was among the pioneering investigators of psychedelic drugs and the author of one of the first written reports to the public about an experience with mescaline which he conducted on himself in 1896 He supported eugenics and served as one of 16 vice presidents of the Eugenics Society from 1909 to 1912 1 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Medicine and psychology 2 1 Eonism 3 Marriage 4 Eugenics 5 Sexual impulse in youth 6 Auto eroticism 7 Smell 8 Views on women and birth control 8 1 Views on sterilization 9 Psychedelics 10 Later life and death 11 Works 11 1 Translations 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life and career EditEllis son of Edward Peppen Ellis and Susannah Mary Wheatley was born in Croydon Surrey now part of Greater London He had four sisters none of whom married His father was a sea captain and an Anglican 2 while his mother was the daughter of a sea captain who had many other relatives that lived on or near the sea When he was seven his father took him on one of his voyages during which they called at Sydney Australia Callao Peru and Antwerp Belgium After his return Ellis attended the French and German College near Wimbledon and afterward attended a school in Mitcham In April 1875 Ellis sailed on his father s ship for Australia soon after his arrival in Sydney he obtained a position as a master at a private school After the discovery of his lack of training he was fired and became a tutor for a family living a few miles from Carcoar New South Wales He spent a year there and then obtained a position as a master at a grammar school in Grafton New South Wales The headmaster had died and Ellis carried on at the school for that year but was unsuccessful At the end of the year he returned to Sydney and after three months training was given charge of two government part time elementary schools one at Sparkes Creek near Scone New South Wales and the other at Junction Creek He lived at the school house on Sparkes Creek for a year He wrote in his autobiography In Australia I gained health of body I attained peace of soul my life task was revealed to me I was able to decide on a professional vocation I became an artist in literature these five points covered the whole activity of my life in the world Some of them I should doubtless have reached without the aid of the Australian environment scarcely all and most of them I could never have achieved so completely if chance had not cast me into the solitude of the Liverpool Range 3 Medicine and psychology EditEllis returned to England in April 1879 He had decided to take up the study of sex and felt his first step must be to qualify as a physician He studied at St Thomas s Hospital Medical School now part of King s College London but never had a regular medical practice His training was aided by a small legacy 4 and also income earned from editing works in the Mermaid Series of lesser known Elizabethan and Jacobean drama 4 He joined The Fellowship of the New Life in 1883 meeting other social reformers Eleanor Marx Edward Carpenter and George Bernard Shaw The 1897 English translation of Ellis s book Sexual Inversion co authored with John Addington Symonds and originally published in German in 1896 was the first English medical textbook on homosexuality 5 6 It describes male homosexual relations as well as adolescent rape Ellis wrote the first objective study of homosexuality as he did not characterise it as a disease immoral or a crime The work assumes that same sex love transcended age taboos as well as gender taboo The work also uses the term bisexual throughout 7 The first edition of the book was bought out by the executor of Symond s estate who forbade any mention of Symonds in the second edition 8 In 1897 a bookseller was prosecuted for stocking Ellis s book Although the term homosexual is attributed to Ellis citation needed he wrote in 1897 Homosexual is a barbarously hybrid word and I claim no responsibility for it 9 In fact the word homosexual was coined in 1868 by the Hungarian author Karl Maria Kertbeny 10 Ellis may have developed psychological concepts of autoeroticism and narcissism both of which were later developed further by Sigmund Freud 11 Ellis s influence may have reached Radclyffe Hall who would have been about 17 years old at the time Sexual Inversion was published She later referred to herself as a sexual invert and wrote of female sexual inverts in Miss Ogilvy Finds Herself and The Well of Loneliness When Ellis bowed out as the star witness in the trial of The Well of Loneliness on 14 May 1928 Norman Haire was set to replace him but no witnesses were called 12 Eonism Edit Ellis studied what today are called transgender phenomena Together with Magnus Hirschfeld Havelock Ellis is considered a major figure in the history of sexology to establish a new category that was separate and distinct from homosexuality 13 Aware of Hirschfeld s studies of transvestism but disagreeing with his terminology in 1913 Ellis proposed the term sexo aesthetic inversion to describe the phenomenon In 1920 he coined the term eonism which he derived from the name of a historical figure the Chevalier d Eon Ellis explained 14 On the psychic side as I view it the Eonist is embodying in an extreme degree the aesthetic attitude of imitation of and identification with the admired object It is normal for a man to identify himself with the woman he loves The Eonist carries that identification too far stimulated by a sensitive and feminine element in himself which is associated with a rather defective virile sexuality on what may be a neurotic basis Ellis found eonism to be a remarkably common anomaly and next in frequency to homosexuality among sexual deviations and categorized it as among the transitional or intermediate forms of sexuality As in the Freudian tradition Ellis postulated that a too close attachment to the mother may encourage eonism but also considered that it probably invokes some defective endocrine balance 14 Marriage Edit Edith Lees and Havelock Ellis In November 1891 at the age of 32 and reportedly still a virgin Ellis married the English writer and proponent of women s rights Edith Lees From the beginning their marriage was unconventional as Edith Lees was openly bisexual citation needed At the end of the honeymoon Ellis went back to his bachelor rooms in Paddington She lived at Fellowship House Their open marriage was the central subject in Ellis s autobiography My Life Ellis reportedly had an affair with Margaret Sanger 15 According to Ellis in My Life his friends were much amused at his being considered an expert on sex Some knew that he reportedly suffered from impotence until the age of 60 He then discovered that he could become aroused by the sight of a woman urinating Ellis named this undinism After his wife died Ellis formed a relationship with a French woman Francoise Lafitte Eugenics EditEllis was a supporter of eugenics He served as vice president to the Eugenics Education Society and wrote on the subject among others in The Task of Social Hygiene Eventually it seems evident a general system whether private or public whereby all personal facts biological and mental normal and morbid are duly and systematically registered must become inevitable if we are to have a real guide as to those persons who are most fit or most unfit to carry on the race The superficially sympathetic man flings a coin to the beggar the more deeply sympathetic man builds an almshouse for him so he need no longer beg but perhaps the most radically sympathetic of all is the man who arranges that the beggar shall not be born In his early writings it was clear that Ellis concurred with the notion that there was a system of racial hierarchies and that non western cultures were considered to be lower races 16 Before explicitly talking about eugenic topics he used the prevalence of homosexuality in these lower races to indicate the universality of the behavior In his work Sexual Inversions where Ellis presented numerous cases of homosexuality in Britain he was always careful to mention the race of the subject and the health of the person s stock which included their neuropathic conditions and the health of their parents However Ellis was clear to assert that he did not feel that homosexuality was an issue that eugenics needed to actively deal with as he felt that once the practice was accepted in society those with homosexual tendencies would comfortably choose not to marry and thus would cease to pass the homosexual heredity along 16 In a debate in the Sociological Society Ellis corresponded with the eugenicist Francis Galton who was presenting a paper in support of marriage restrictions While Galton analogized eugenics to breeding domesticated animals Ellis felt that a greater sense of caution was needed before applying the eugenic regulations to populations as we have scarcely yet realized how subtle and far reaching hereditary influences are 16 Instead because unlike domesticated animals humans were in charge of who they mated with Ellis argued that a greater emphasis was needed on public education about how vital this issue was Ellis thus held much more moderate views than many contemporary eugenicists In fact Ellis also fundamentally disagreed with Galton s leading ideas that procreation restrictions were the same as marriage restrictions 17 Ellis believed that those who should not procreate should still be able to gain all the other benefits of marriage and to not allow that was an intolerable burden This in his mind was what led to eugenics being misunderstood ridiculed and regarded as a fad 17 Throughout his life Ellis was both a member and later a council member of the Eugenics Society Moreover he played a role on the General Committee of the First International Eugenics Congress 16 Sexual impulse in youth EditEllis 1933 book Psychology of Sex is one of the many manifestations of his interest in human sexuality In this book he goes into vivid detail of how children can experience sexuality differently in terms of time and intensity He mentions that it was previously believed that in childhood humans had no sex impulse at all If it is possible to maintain that the sex impulse has no normal existence in early life then every manifestation of it at that period must be perverse he adds He continues by stating that even in the early development and lower functional levels of the genitalia there is a wide range of variation in terms of sexual stimulation He claims that the ability of some infants producing genital reactions seen as reflex signs of irritation are typically not vividly remembered Since the details of these manifestations are not remembered there is no possible way to determine them as pleasurable However Ellis claims that many people of both sexes can recall having agreeable sensations with the genitalia as a child They are not as is sometimes imagined repressed They are however not usually mentioned to adults Ellis argues that they typically stand out and are remembered for the sole contrast of the intense encounter to any other ordinary experience 18 Ellis claims that sexual self excitement is known to happen at an early age He references authors like Marc Fonssagrives and Perez in France who published their findings in the nineteenth century These early ages are not strictly limited to ages close to puberty as can be seen in their findings These authors provide cases for children of both sexes who have masturbated from the age of three or four Ellis references Robie s findings that boys first sex feelings appear between the ages of five and fourteen For girls this age ranges from eight to nineteen For both sexes these first sexual experiences arise more frequently during the later years as opposed to the earlier years 19 Ellis then references G V Hamilton s studies that found twenty percent of males and fourteen percent of females have pleasurable experiences with their sex organs before the age of six This is only supplemented by Ellis reference to Katharine Davis studies which found that twenty to twenty nine percent of boys and forty nine to fifty one percent of girls were masturbating by the age of eleven However in the next three years after boys percentages exceeded those of girls Ellis also contributed to the idea of varying levels of sexual excitation He asserts it is a mistake to assume all children are able to experience genital arousal or pleasurable erotic sensations He proposes cases where an innocent child is led to believe that stimulation of the genitalia will result in a pleasurable erection Some of these children may fail and not be able to experience this either pleasure or an erection until puberty Ellis concludes then that children are capable of a wide range of genital and sexual aptitude Ellis even considers ancestry as a contributions to different sexual excitation levels stating that children of more unsound heredity and or hypersexual parents are more precociously excitable 19 Auto eroticism EditEllis views of auto eroticism were very comprehensive including much more than masturbation Auto eroticism according to Ellis includes a wide range of phenomena Ellis states in his 1897 book Studies in the Psychology of Sex that auto eroticism ranges from erotic day dreams marked by a passivity shown by the subject to unshamed efforts at sexual self manipulation witnessed among the insane 20 Ellis also argues that auto erotic impulses can be heightened by bodily processes like menstrual flow During this time he says women who would otherwise not feel a strong propensity for auto eroticism increase their masturbation patterns This trend is absent however in women without a conscious acceptance of their sexual feelings and in a small percentage of women suffering from a sexual or general ailment which result in a significant amount of sexual anesthesia 21 Ellis also raises social concern over how auto erotic tendencies affect marriages He goes on to tying auto eroticism to declining marriage rates As these rates decline he concludes that auto eroticism will only increase in both amount and intensity for both men and women Therefore he states this is an important issue to both the moralist and physician to investigate psychological underpinnings of these experiences and determine an attitude toward them 22 Smell EditEllis believed that the sense of smell although ineffective at long ranges still contributes to sexual attraction and therefore to mate selection In his 1905 book Sexual selection in man Ellis makes a claim for the sense of smell in the role of sexual selection 23 He asserts that while we have evolved out of a great necessity for the sense of smell we still rely on our sense of smell with sexual selection The contributions that smell makes in sexual attraction can even be heightened with certain climates Ellis states that with warmer climates come a heightened sensitivity to sexual and other positive feelings of smell among normal populations Because of this he believes people are often delighted by odors in the East particularly in India in Hebrew and Mohammedan lands Ellis then continues by describing the distinct odours in various races noting that the Japanese race has the least intense of bodily odours 24 Ellis concludes his argument by stating On the whole it may be said that in the usual life of man odours play a not inconsiderable part and raise problems which are not without interest but that their demonstrable part in actual sexual selection is comparatively small 25 Views on women and birth control EditEllis favoured feminism from a eugenic perspective feeling that the enhanced social economic and sexual choices that feminism provided for women would result in women choosing partners who were more eugenically sound 16 In his view intelligent women would not choose nor be forced to marry and procreate with feeble minded men Ellis viewed birth control as merely the continuation of an evolutionary progression noting that natural progress has always consisted of increasing impediments to reproduction which lead to a lower quantity of offspring but a much higher quality of them 17 From a eugenic perspective birth control was an invaluable instrument for the elevation of the race 17 However Ellis noted that birth control could not be used randomly in a way that could have a detrimental impact by reducing conception but rather needed to be used in a targeted manner to improve the qualities of certain stocks He observed that it was the superior stocks who had knowledge of and used birth control while the inferior stocks propagated without checks 17 Ellis s solution to this was a focus on contraceptives in education as this would disseminate the knowledge in the populations that he felt needed them the most Ellis argued that birth control was the only available way of making eugenic selection practicable as the only other option was wide scale abstention from intercourse for those who were unfit 17 Views on sterilization Edit Ellis was strongly opposed to the idea of castration of either sex for eugenic purposes In 1909 regulations were introduced at the Cantonal Asylum in Bern which allowed those deemed unfit and with strong sexual inclinations to be mandatorily sterilized 26 In a particular instance several men and women including epileptics and paedophiles were castrated some of whom voluntarily requested it While the results were positive in that none of the subjects were found guilty of any more sexual offences Ellis remained staunchly opposed to the practice 26 His view on the origin of these inclinations was that sexual impulses do not reside in the sexual organs but rather they persist in the brain 26 Moreover he posited that the sexual glands provided an important source of internal secretions vital for the functioning of the organism and thus the glands removal could greatly injure the patient 26 However already in his time Ellis was witness to the rise of vasectomies and ligatures of the Fallopian tubes which performed the same sterilization without removing the whole organ In these cases Ellis was much more favourable yet still maintaining that sterilization of the unfit if it is to be a practical and humane measure commanding general approval must be voluntary on the part of the person undergoing it and never compulsory 26 His opposition to such a system was not only rooted in morality Rather Ellis also considered the practicality of the situation hypothesizing that if an already mentally unfit man is forced to undergo sterilization he would only become more ill balanced and would end up committing more anti social acts Though Ellis was never at ease with the idea of forced sterilizations he was willing to find ways to circumvent that restriction His focus was on the social ends of eugenics and as a means to it Ellis was in no way against persuading volunteers to undergo sterilization by withdrawing Poor Relief from them 17 While he preferred to convince those he deemed unfit using education Ellis supported coercion as a tool Furthermore he supported adding ideas about eugenics and birth control to the education system in order to restructure society and to promote social hygiene 27 For Ellis sterilization seemed to be the only eugenic instrument that could be used on the mentally unfit In fact in his publication The Sterilization of the Unfit Ellis argued that even institutionalization could not guarantee the complete prevention of procreation between the unfit and thus the burdens of society to say nothing of the race are being multiplied It is not possible to view sterilization with enthusiasm when applied to any class of people but what I ask myself is the practical alternative 26 Psychedelics EditEllis was among the pioneering investigators of psychedelic drugs and the author of one of the first written reports to the public about an experience with mescaline which he conducted on himself in 1896 He consumed a brew made of three Lophophora williamsii buds in the afternoon of Good Friday alone in his set of rooms in Temple London During the experience lasting for about 24 hours he noted a plethora of extremely vivid complex colourful pleasantly smelling hallucinations consisting both of abstract geometrical patterns and objects such as butterflies and other insects He published the account of the experience in The Contemporary Review in 1898 Mescal A New Artificial Paradise 28 The title of the article alludes to an earlier work on the effects of mind altering substances an 1860 book Les Paradis artificiels by French poet Charles Baudelaire containing descriptions of experiments with opium and hashish Ellis was so impressed with the aesthetic quality of the experience that he gave some specimens of peyote to the Irish poet W B Yeats a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn an organisation of which another mescaline researcher Aleister Crowley was also a member 29 Later life and death Edit Commemorative plaque dedicated to Ellis and his wife at Golders Green Crematorium Ellis resigned from his position as a Fellow of the Eugenics Society over its stance on sterilization in January 1931 30 Ellis spent the last year of his life at Hintlesham Suffolk where he died in July 1939 31 His ashes were scattered at Golders Green Crematorium North London following his cremation 32 Works Edit Inmate of Elmira Reformatory showing four views of head The Criminal 1890 The Criminal 1890 The New Spirit 1890 The Nationalisation of Health 1892 Man and Woman A Study of Secondary and Tertiary Sexual Characteristics 1894 revised 1929 Das kontrare Geschlechtsgefuhl in German Leipzig Wigand 1896 p 1 with J A Symonds Studies in the Psychology of Sex 1897 1928 six volumes listed below Studies in the Psychology of Sex Vol 1 The Evolution of Modesty The Phenomena of Sexual Periodicity Auto Erotism 1897 Affirmations 1898 Mescal A New Artificial Paradise The Contemporary Review LXXIII 1898 The Nineteenth Century 1900 Studies in the Psychology of Sex Vol 2 Sexual Inversion 1900 Studies in the Psychology of Sex Vol 3 Analysis of the Sexual Impulse Love and Pain The Sexual Impulse in Women 1903 A Study of British Genius 1904 Studies in the Psychology of Sex Vol 4 Sexual Selection in Man 1905 Studies in the Psychology of Sex Vol 5 Erotic Symbolism The Mechanism of Detumescence The Psychic State in Pregnancy 1906 The Soul of Spain 1908 The sterilisation of the unfit The Eugenics Review 1 3 203 06 1909 PMC 2986668 PMID 21259474 Studies in the Psychology of Sex Vol 6 Sex in Relation to Society 1910 The Problem of Race Regeneration 1911 The World of Dreams 1911 new edition 1926 The task of social hygiene New York 1912 p 10 Birth control and eugenics The Eugenics Review 9 1 32 41 1917 PMC 2942166 PMID 21259632 The Task of Social Hygiene 1912 Essays in War Time February 2006 The Philosophy of Conflict 1919 On Life and Sex Essays of Love and Virtue 1921 Kanga Creek an Australian Idyll The Golden Cockerel press 1922 Little Essays of Love and Virtue 1922 The Dance of Life 1923 Impressions and Comments Vol 3 1924 Sonnets with Folk Songs from the Spanish 1925 Eonism and Other Supplementary Studies 1928 Studies in the Psychology of Sex Vol 7 1928 The Art of Life 1929 selected and arranged by Mrs S Herbert More Essays of Love and Virtue 1931 ed James Hinton Life in Nature 1931 Views and Reviews 1932 Psychology of Sex 1933 ed Imaginary Conversations and Poems A Selection by Walter Savage Landor 1933 Chapman 1934 My Confessional 1934 Questions of Our Day 1934 From Rousseau to Proust 1935 Selected Essays 1936 Poems 1937 selected by John Gawsworth pseudonym of T Fytton Armstrong Love and Marriage 1938 with others My life Houghton Mufflin 1939 Sex Compatibility in Marriage 1939 From Marlowe to Shaw 1950 ed by J Gawsworth The Genius of Europe 1950 Sex and Marriage 1951 ed by J Gawsworth The Unpublished Letters of Havelock Ellis to Joseph Ishill 1954 Translations Edit Germinal by Zola 1895 reissued 1933 The Psychology of the Emotions by Theodule Armand Ribot 1897 References Edit The Eugenics Review PDF The Eugenics Education Society 1913 PMC 2986818 retrieved 4 October 2021 Havelock Ellis 1930 Ellis 1939 p 139 a b Thomson 1968 p 210 Ellis amp Symonds 1896 White 1999 p 66 Storr Meryl 1999 Storr Merl ed Bisexuality A Critical Reader London Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203024676 ISBN 9780203024676 Duberman Martin Bauml Vicinus Martha Chauncey Jr George eds 1990 Hidden from History Reclaiming the Gay amp Lesbian Past New American Library p 1 ISBN 9780452010673 homosexual adj Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 4 October 2021 Greenberg Gary 2007 Gay by Choice The Science of Sexual Identity Mother Jones Laplanche amp Pontalis 1988 p 45 Souhami 1998 p 197 Ekins amp King 2006 pp 61 64 a b Ellis Albert 2008 1933 Psychology of Sex ISBN 978 1443735322 The Margaret Sanger Papers Project Division of Libraries at New York University a b c d e Crozier 2008 a b c d e f g Ellis 1917 p 35 Ellis 1933 pp 70 71 a b Ellis 1933 p 71 Ellis 1897 pp 98 99 Ellis 1897 p 64 Ellis 1897 p 99 Ellis 1905 p 110 Ellis 1905 p 111 Ellis 1905 p 112 a b c d e f Ellis 1909 p 203 Ellis 1912 p 10 Ellis 1898 Rudgley 1993 Wyndham 2012 p 242 Ellis Author of Sex Books Is Dead at 80 The Times Hammond Indiana p 35 col A Wilson 2016 p 225 Bibliography EditCrozier Ivan 2008 Havelock Ellis eugenicist Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 39 2 187 94 doi 10 1016 j shpsc 2008 03 002 ISSN 1369 8486 PMID 18534349 Ekins Richard King Dave 2006 The Transgender Phenomenon SAGE Publications ISBN 978 0761971634 Grosskurth Phyllis 1980 Havelock Ellis A Biography Allen Lane ISBN 978 0713910711 Laplanche Jean Pontalis Jean Bertrand 1988 The Language of Psycho analysis Karnac Books ISBN 978 0946439492 Rudgley Richard 1993 The alchemy of culture intoxicants in society British Museum Press ISBN 978 0714117362 Souhami Diana 1998 The Trials of Radclyffe Hall Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0297818250 Thomson Robert 1968 The Pelican History of Psychology First ed Pelican p 463 ISBN 978 0140209044 White Chris 1999 Nineteenth Century Writings on Homosexuality CRC Press p 66 Wilson Scott 2016 Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3d ed McFarland ISBN 978 1476625997 Wyndham Diana 2012 Norman Haire and the Study of Sex Sydney University Press ISBN 978 1743320068 Further reading EditSerle Percival 1949 Ellis Henry Havelock Dictionary of Australian Biography Sydney Angus amp Robertson Hale Nathan G 1971 Freud and the Americans the beginnings of psychoanalysis in the United States 1876 1917 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 501427 3 Calder Marshall Arthur 1959 Havelock Ellis a biography Hart Davis The Sage of Sex A Life of Havelock Ellis New York G P Putnam s Sons 1960 ISBN 9781258158576 U S title External links Edit Human sexuality portal United Kingdom portal Biography portal Media related to Havelock Ellis at Wikimedia Commons Works by or about Havelock Ellis at Wikisource Quotations related to Havelock Ellis at Wikiquote Havelock Ellis papers MS 195 Manuscripts and Archives Yale University Library Petri Liukkonen Havelock Ellis Books and Writers Henry Havelock Ellis papers from the Historic Psychiatry Collection Menninger Archives Kansas Historical Society Works by Havelock Ellis at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Havelock Ellis at Internet Archive Works by Havelock Ellis at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Havelock Ellis amp oldid 1155911916, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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