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Karl Maria Kertbeny

Károly Mária Kertbeny (born Karl Maria Benkert; 28 February 1824 – 23 January 1882) was a Hungarian journalist, translator, memoirist and human rights campaigner. Kertbeny coined the words heterosexual and homosexual as the German nouns Heterosexual and Homosexual.[1]

Károly Mária Kertbeny
Karl Maria Kertbeny, ca. 1865
Born
Karl Maria Benkert

(1824-02-28)28 February 1824
Died23 January 1882(1882-01-23) (aged 57)
Known forCampaigning for gay rights, coining the terms homosexual and heterosexual (as the German nouns Homosexual and Heterosexual)

He translated works by Hungarian poets and writers Sándor Petőfi, János Arany and Mór Jókai into German. Among his acquaintances were Heinrich Heine, George Sand, Alfred de Musset, Hans Christian Andersen, and the Brothers Grimm.

Early life edit

 

Karl Maria Benkert was born in Vienna to Hungarian parents on 28 February 1824. He moved with his family to Budapest when he was a child and was equally fluent in German and Hungarian. After a stint in the Hungarian army, Benkert made a living as a journalist and travel writer and wrote at least twenty-five books on various subjects.

Career edit

Benkert left Hungary and was determined to become an advocate on behalf of Hungarian culture. He, therefore, arranged for his legal name to take the Hungarian form under which he lived and published for most of his life. Final approval on 22 February 1848 made him Kertbeny Károly Mária or, in the standard way of rendering a Hungarian name in other European languages, Károly Mária Kertbeny.[1]

He made a variety of contacts in his travels. He was Charles Baudelaire's only personal Austro-Hungarian contact.[2]

In his fiction, quite apart from his political advocacy, Kertbeny included homosexual characters in several works, including Erinnerungen an Charles Sealsfield, Spiegelbilder der Erinnerung and the short story "Im Walde".[3]

Writings on sexuality edit

He settled in Berlin in 1868, when he was still unmarried at 44. Kerbeny claimed in his writings to be "normally sexed". However, his diaries list a self-censored string of encounters with youths and men ("young barber lad"; "very much in love with the lad"; "I have done it"), and recurring fear following the arrest of Karl Heinrich Ulrichs with whom he corresponded ("Awful days!.... Horrible nightmares. I have burnt all the dangerous letters"), which suggest he was secretly homosexual.[1]

He explained his interest in sexual minorities as his "instinctive drive to take issue with every injustice". His cited as a formative experience from his teenage years the suicide of a co-worker who was being blackmailed and threatened with exposure as a homosexual.

In 1869, he published two anonymous pamphlets.[a] He argued that the Prussian sodomy law, Paragraph 143, which later became Paragraph 175 of the penal code of the German Empire,[4] violated the "rights of man". He advanced the classic liberal argument that consensual sexual acts in private should not be subject to criminal law. He contended that the Prussian law allowed blackmailers to extort money from homosexuals and often drove them to suicide.

Whether sexual preference was innate was called by Kerbeny "a very interesting riddle of nature" that was best excluded from arguments for the decriminalization of sexual practices. Instead, he considered the right of a government to intervene in private matters. He wrote:[1]

We should convince our opponents that exactly according to their legal notions they do not have anything to do with this inclination, let it be innate or voluntary, because the state does not have the right to intervene in what is happening between two consenting people aged over 14, excluding publicity [in private], not hurting the rights of any third party.

On the other hand, he repeatedly described one's sexual drive as "innate and unchanging". That contradicted the dominant view up to that time of men committing "sodomy" out of mere wickedness. Gay men, he said, were not by nature effeminate, and he pointed out that many of the great heroes of history were gay. With Heinrich Hössli and Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, he was among the first writers to put those now-familiar arguments before the public.

 
First use of the words Monosexual, Homosexual, and Heterosexual in a letter written on 6 May 1868

In a letter written on 6 May 1868, Kertbeny published, in German the terms homosexual and heterosexual[5] as part of his system for defining sexual types to replace the pejorative terms sodomite and pederast, which were used in the German- and French-speaking world of his time. In addition, he called those who masturbate monosexualists and practitioners of anal intercourse pygists.

He also used German terms that did not influence his contemporaries but suggest how he was considering terms that did not rely on classical languages, including die Gleichegeschlechtlichen ("those of the same sex") and der Gleichegeschlechtlicher Akt ("the same-sex act").[3]

Kertbeny made no further contribution to the debates about homosexuality or its legal status or origins. In 1880, he offered a chapter on homosexuality for Gustav Jäger to include in his book Discovery of the Soul, but Jäger's publisher decided that it was too controversial and omitted it. Jäger nevertheless used Kertbeny's terminology elsewhere in the book.[6][b]

Death edit

 
The grave of Károly Kertbeny in the cemetery on Kerepesi út in Budapest

Kertbeny died in Budapest on 23 January 1882 at the age of 58. József Komócsy [hu] (1836–1894) eulogized him: "He devoted his life to serving his country, even when he was living abroad. He publicised our glory there amongst foreign peoples. His first literary activities were received with mockery, but he did not give up and he brought light to Hungarian literature for foreign people".[7]

The Hungarian writer and literary historian Lajos Hatvany [de] has described him in these terms: "This moody, fluttering, imperfect writer is one of the best and undeservedly forgotten Hungarian memoir writers".[citation needed] He also said: "He was born effeminately sensitive, soft, believing, fair, open minded and enthusiastic for beauty. He loved to love, and loved to be loved. He loved only the beautiful and he wanted the love of the best. Mária! - An old, vain, swindling, naughty, clownish, thick skinned, envious, literary adventurer became of him: Károly, poor, Károly!"[7]

Kertbeny's gravesite, which was identified in 2001, is located in Budapest's Kerepesi Cemetery, which is the final resting place of numerous prominent Hungarians of the 19th and the 20th centuries. The gay community set a new tombstone on it, and since 2002, a wreath is placed at his grave as part of Hungarian gay festivals.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Paragraph 143 of the Prussian Penal Code of 14 April 1851 and Its Reaffirmation as Paragraph 152 in the Proposed Penal Code for the North German Confederation. An Open and Professional Correspondence to His Excellency Dr. Adolph Leonhardt, Royal Prussian Minister of Justice.
  2. ^ The German sex researcher Richard von Krafft-Ebing, in his Psychopathia Sexualis (1886), borrowed the terms homosexual and heterosexual from Jäger's book. Krafft-Ebing's work was so influential that they became the standard terms for differences in sexual orientation and superseded Ulrichs's word, Urning.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Takács, Judit (2004). "The Double Life of Kertbeny". In G. Hekma (ed.). (PDF). Amsterdam: UvA – Mosse Foundation. pp. 26–40. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-09-12. Retrieved 2010-05-16 – via policy.hu.
  2. ^ Józan, Ildikó (2017). "Baudelaire En Hongrie". L'Année Baudelaire. 21: 104. JSTOR 45073694.
  3. ^ a b Bullough, Vern L. (1989). "The Physician and Research into Human Sexual Behavior in Nineteenth-Century Germany". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 63 (2): 247–67, esp. 257. JSTOR 44451381.
  4. ^ Beachy, Robert (2010). "The German Invention of Homosexuality". The Journal of Modern History. 82 (4): 807. doi:10.1086/656077. JSTOR 10.1086/656077. S2CID 142605226.
  5. ^ "1868, May 6: Karl Maria Kertbeny: "Homosexual," "Heterosexual"". OutHistory. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  6. ^ Myren-Svelstad, Per Esben (2017). "Tantalizing Idylls: Nature and Unattainable Pleasures in Gay and Lesbian Literature". Scandinavian Studies. 89 (3): 327n. doi:10.5406/scanstud.89.3.0326. hdl:11250/2488490. JSTOR 10.5406/scanstud.89.3.0326. S2CID 165783482.
  7. ^ a b Takács, Judit. . Archived from the original on 15 October 2004. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
Additional sources
  • Robert D. Tobin (2005). "Kertbeny's 'Homosexuality' and the Language of Nationalism". In Margaret Sönser Breen; Fiona Peters (eds.). Genealogies of Identity: Interdisciplinary Readings on Sex and Sexuality. Rodopi. pp. 3–18. ISBN 9042017589.

External links edit

  • Burroway, Jim (6 May 2008). "Today in History: The Love that Dares not Speak its Name Gets a Name". Box Turtle Bulletin. from the original on 9 November 2017.

karl, maria, kertbeny, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Karl Maria Kertbeny news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The native form of this personal name is Kertbeny Karoly Maria This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Karoly Maria Kertbeny born Karl Maria Benkert 28 February 1824 23 January 1882 was a Hungarian journalist translator memoirist and human rights campaigner Kertbeny coined the words heterosexual and homosexual as the German nouns Heterosexual and Homosexual 1 Karoly Maria KertbenyKarl Maria Kertbeny ca 1865BornKarl Maria Benkert 1824 02 28 28 February 1824Vienna Austrian EmpireDied23 January 1882 1882 01 23 aged 57 Budapest Austria HungaryKnown forCampaigning for gay rights coining the terms homosexual and heterosexual as the German nouns Homosexual and Heterosexual He translated works by Hungarian poets and writers Sandor Petofi Janos Arany and Mor Jokai into German Among his acquaintances were Heinrich Heine George Sand Alfred de Musset Hans Christian Andersen and the Brothers Grimm Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Writings on sexuality 3 Death 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Karl Maria Benkert was born in Vienna to Hungarian parents on 28 February 1824 He moved with his family to Budapest when he was a child and was equally fluent in German and Hungarian After a stint in the Hungarian army Benkert made a living as a journalist and travel writer and wrote at least twenty five books on various subjects Career editBenkert left Hungary and was determined to become an advocate on behalf of Hungarian culture He therefore arranged for his legal name to take the Hungarian form under which he lived and published for most of his life Final approval on 22 February 1848 made him Kertbeny Karoly Maria or in the standard way of rendering a Hungarian name in other European languages Karoly Maria Kertbeny 1 He made a variety of contacts in his travels He was Charles Baudelaire s only personal Austro Hungarian contact 2 In his fiction quite apart from his political advocacy Kertbeny included homosexual characters in several works including Erinnerungen an Charles Sealsfield Spiegelbilder der Erinnerung and the short story Im Walde 3 Writings on sexuality edit He settled in Berlin in 1868 when he was still unmarried at 44 Kerbeny claimed in his writings to be normally sexed However his diaries list a self censored string of encounters with youths and men young barber lad very much in love with the lad I have done it and recurring fear following the arrest of Karl Heinrich Ulrichs with whom he corresponded Awful days Horrible nightmares I have burnt all the dangerous letters which suggest he was secretly homosexual 1 He explained his interest in sexual minorities as his instinctive drive to take issue with every injustice His cited as a formative experience from his teenage years the suicide of a co worker who was being blackmailed and threatened with exposure as a homosexual In 1869 he published two anonymous pamphlets a He argued that the Prussian sodomy law Paragraph 143 which later became Paragraph 175 of the penal code of the German Empire 4 violated the rights of man He advanced the classic liberal argument that consensual sexual acts in private should not be subject to criminal law He contended that the Prussian law allowed blackmailers to extort money from homosexuals and often drove them to suicide Whether sexual preference was innate was called by Kerbeny a very interesting riddle of nature that was best excluded from arguments for the decriminalization of sexual practices Instead he considered the right of a government to intervene in private matters He wrote 1 We should convince our opponents that exactly according to their legal notions they do not have anything to do with this inclination let it be innate or voluntary because the state does not have the right to intervene in what is happening between two consenting people aged over 14 excluding publicity in private not hurting the rights of any third party On the other hand he repeatedly described one s sexual drive as innate and unchanging That contradicted the dominant view up to that time of men committing sodomy out of mere wickedness Gay men he said were not by nature effeminate and he pointed out that many of the great heroes of history were gay With Heinrich Hossli and Karl Heinrich Ulrichs he was among the first writers to put those now familiar arguments before the public nbsp First use of the words Monosexual Homosexual and Heterosexual in a letter written on 6 May 1868In a letter written on 6 May 1868 Kertbeny published in German the terms homosexual and heterosexual 5 as part of his system for defining sexual types to replace the pejorative terms sodomite and pederast which were used in the German and French speaking world of his time In addition he called those who masturbate monosexualists and practitioners of anal intercourse pygists He also used German terms that did not influence his contemporaries but suggest how he was considering terms that did not rely on classical languages including die Gleichegeschlechtlichen those of the same sex and der Gleichegeschlechtlicher Akt the same sex act 3 Kertbeny made no further contribution to the debates about homosexuality or its legal status or origins In 1880 he offered a chapter on homosexuality for Gustav Jager to include in his book Discovery of the Soul but Jager s publisher decided that it was too controversial and omitted it Jager nevertheless used Kertbeny s terminology elsewhere in the book 6 b Death edit nbsp The grave of Karoly Kertbeny in the cemetery on Kerepesi ut in BudapestKertbeny died in Budapest on 23 January 1882 at the age of 58 Jozsef Komocsy hu 1836 1894 eulogized him He devoted his life to serving his country even when he was living abroad He publicised our glory there amongst foreign peoples His first literary activities were received with mockery but he did not give up and he brought light to Hungarian literature for foreign people 7 The Hungarian writer and literary historian Lajos Hatvany de has described him in these terms This moody fluttering imperfect writer is one of the best and undeservedly forgotten Hungarian memoir writers citation needed He also said He was born effeminately sensitive soft believing fair open minded and enthusiastic for beauty He loved to love and loved to be loved He loved only the beautiful and he wanted the love of the best Maria An old vain swindling naughty clownish thick skinned envious literary adventurer became of him Karoly poor Karoly 7 Kertbeny s gravesite which was identified in 2001 is located in Budapest s Kerepesi Cemetery which is the final resting place of numerous prominent Hungarians of the 19th and the 20th centuries The gay community set a new tombstone on it and since 2002 a wreath is placed at his grave as part of Hungarian gay festivals Notes edit Paragraph 143 of the Prussian Penal Code of 14 April 1851 and Its Reaffirmation as Paragraph 152 in the Proposed Penal Code for the North German Confederation An Open and Professional Correspondence to His Excellency Dr Adolph Leonhardt Royal Prussian Minister of Justice The German sex researcher Richard von Krafft Ebing in his Psychopathia Sexualis 1886 borrowed the terms homosexual and heterosexual from Jager s book Krafft Ebing s work was so influential that they became the standard terms for differences in sexual orientation and superseded Ulrichs s word Urning References edit a b c d Takacs Judit 2004 The Double Life of Kertbeny In G Hekma ed Past and Present of Radical Sexual Politics PDF Amsterdam UvA Mosse Foundation pp 26 40 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 09 12 Retrieved 2010 05 16 via policy hu Jozan Ildiko 2017 Baudelaire En Hongrie L Annee Baudelaire 21 104 JSTOR 45073694 a b Bullough Vern L 1989 The Physician and Research into Human Sexual Behavior in Nineteenth Century Germany Bulletin of the History of Medicine 63 2 247 67 esp 257 JSTOR 44451381 Beachy Robert 2010 The German Invention of Homosexuality The Journal of Modern History 82 4 807 doi 10 1086 656077 JSTOR 10 1086 656077 S2CID 142605226 1868 May 6 Karl Maria Kertbeny Homosexual Heterosexual OutHistory Retrieved 27 June 2022 Myren Svelstad Per Esben 2017 Tantalizing Idylls Nature and Unattainable Pleasures in Gay and Lesbian Literature Scandinavian Studies 89 3 327n doi 10 5406 scanstud 89 3 0326 hdl 11250 2488490 JSTOR 10 5406 scanstud 89 3 0326 S2CID 165783482 a b Takacs Judit Speech inaugurating a new tombstone for Karoly Kertbeny 1824 1882 Archived from the original on 15 October 2004 Retrieved 27 June 2022 Additional sourcesRobert D Tobin 2005 Kertbeny s Homosexuality and the Language of Nationalism In Margaret Sonser Breen Fiona Peters eds Genealogies of Identity Interdisciplinary Readings on Sex and Sexuality Rodopi pp 3 18 ISBN 9042017589 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Karl Maria Kertbeny Burroway Jim 6 May 2008 Today in History The Love that Dares not Speak its Name Gets a Name Box Turtle Bulletin Archived from the original on 9 November 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karl Maria Kertbeny amp oldid 1197837078, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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