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Word: sexuality (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...dealing with sexual difficulties Dr. Kanner gets best results by frankly and truthfully answering all the child's questions in words which the child can understand. However, he carefully avoids telling the child anything which the child cannot understand. The answers should be intellectual, not moral, because the healthy child is not naturally moral...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEDICINE: Naughty Children | 7/15/1935 | See Source »

...does not believe that Alfred de Musset fell in love at 4, Byron at 8, Dante at 9, Goethe at 10. He believes that they, like many another very young child, had a "crush" on someone. Crushes are not reprehensible, says Dr. Kanner. But they may occasionally lead to sexual affairs, especially if the person adored is not well balanced emotionally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEDICINE: Naughty Children | 7/15/1935 | See Source »

Died. Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld, 67, famed Jewish neurologist, founder of the Institute for Sexual Science in Berlin, Nazi exile since 1933; in Nice. Unkempt and walrus-mustached, he was called "the Einstein of Sex," had heard the confidences of 30,000 sexually maladjusted people. He believed that absolute sexual normality is rarer than abnormality, crusaded for candor, removal of restrictive sex laws and customs. Said he: "If a man wants to understand a woman, he must discover the woman in himself, and if a woman would understand a man, she must dig in her own consciousness to discover...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 27, 1935 | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

...condition of fear, physically and mentally. His heart palpitates; his limbs are weak; he cannot digest his food; he sweats easily; he gets out of breath. Mentally he is often the victim of one of the foregoing phobias. Dr. Sigmund Freud believes that anxiety states are always caused by sexual frustration. But, says FORTUNE, "most psychiatrists would also include financial worries, domestic friction, and other non-sexual causes. In some ways an anxiety state resembles an acute neurasthenia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Nervous Breakdown | 4/15/1935 | See Source »

Only those who buy or borrow bootleg books got a chance to read the late D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover, the most outspoken novel yet written on sexual unhappiness, its cause and cure. Those who read it remember, besides its paeans to physical passion, punctuated by Anglo-Saxon four-letter words and North-country dialect, its Lawrentian plot: how Lady Constance Chatterley, full-blooded young wife to a paralytic peer, sought fulfillment elsewhere and found it with Mellors, her husband's gamekeeper. Author Lawrence, no champion of neat endings, left his lovers looking forward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Postscript to Passion | 3/25/1935 | See Source »

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