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Volkmar Sigusch: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "'''Volkmar Sigusch''' (11 June 1940 – 7 February 2023) was a German sexologist, physician and sociologist. From 1973 to 2006, he was the director of the ''Institut für Sexualwissenschaft'' (Institute for Sexual Science) at the clinic of Goethe University in Frankfurt. Sigusch studied medicine, psychology and philosophy (under Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno) in Frankfurt am Main, Berlin and Hamburg. After recieving his M.D. and PhD, he worked from 1973 as a prof...")
 
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As a medical doctor, Sigusch took a scientific, evidence-based, harm-reduction approach to non-normative sexuality which strays into the domain of criminal law ('sex offenders'). In 1979, he co-authored a paper arguing against the use of psychosurgery on sex offenders, writing: "We consider it essential that this surgery be suspended at least as long as the possible therapeutic effectiveness and the possible adverse side effects remain unclear."<ref>[https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01541419 Psychosurgery on sex offenders and sexual “deviants” in West Germany] (1979)</ref>
As a medical doctor, Sigusch took a scientific, evidence-based, harm-reduction approach to non-normative sexuality which strays into the domain of criminal law ('sex offenders'). In 1979, he co-authored a paper arguing against the use of psychosurgery on sex offenders, writing: "We consider it essential that this surgery be suspended at least as long as the possible therapeutic effectiveness and the possible adverse side effects remain unclear."<ref>[https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01541419 Psychosurgery on sex offenders and sexual “deviants” in West Germany] (1979)</ref>


Sigusch was close to the [[Eberhard Schorsch]],<ref>[https://de-m-wikipedia-org.translate.goog/wiki/Eberhard_Schorsch?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-US&_x_tr_pto=wapp Schorsch - Translation of German Wikipedia]</ref> who published extensively on sex offender research, and in 1973 argued that sexual contact between minors and older people was harmless if it was consensual (mutually willing) and did not involve force.<ref>See our page [[Beispiel Peter Schult]]</ref> Sigusch was also close to [[Gunter Schmidt]], who wrote the foreword ("The Debate on Paedophilia")<ref>Schmidt, ''[https://doi.org/10.1300/J082v20n01_01 The Debate on Paedophilia]'' (1991).</ref> to the famous scholarly compendium on "Intergenerational Intimacy" (1991), published as a special issue in the [[Journal of Homosexuality]].<ref>[https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/wjhm20/20/1-2 "Intergenerational Intimacy" (1991) special issue].</ref> As early LGBT advocates, these three influential academics reached and published supportive conclusions about homosexuals and homosexuality. They all accurately distinguished between [[pedophilia]] as an exclusive or preferential attraction, a possible identity category, and the act of intergenerational / age-gap sexual contact, deemed [[child sexual abuse]] in some legal jurisdictions and most current professional literature.   
Sigusch was close to the [[Eberhard Schorsch]],<ref>[https://de-m-wikipedia-org.translate.goog/wiki/Eberhard_Schorsch?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-US&_x_tr_pto=wapp Schorsch - Translation of German Wikipedia]</ref> who published extensively on sex offender research, and in 1973 argued that sexual contact between minors and older people was harmless if it was consensual (mutually willing) and did not involve force.<ref>See our page [[Beispiel Peter Schult]]</ref> Sigusch was also close to [[Gunter Schmidt]], who wrote the foreword ("The Debate on Paedophilia")<ref>Schmidt, ''[https://doi.org/10.1300/J082v20n01_01 The Debate on Paedophilia]'' (1991).</ref> to the famous scholarly compendium on "Intergenerational Intimacy" (1991), published as a special issue in the [[Journal of Homosexuality]].<ref>[https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/wjhm20/20/1-2 "Intergenerational Intimacy" (1991) special issue].</ref> As [[Historical_examples_of_LGBT-MAP_unity|early LGBT advocates]], these three influential academics reached and published supportive conclusions about homosexuals and homosexuality. They all accurately distinguished between [[pedophilia]] as an exclusive or preferential attraction, a possible identity category, and the act of intergenerational / age-gap sexual contact, deemed [[child sexual abuse]] in some legal jurisdictions and most current professional literature.   


==References==
==References==


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[[Category:Official Encyclopedia]][[Category:Sociological Theory]][[Category:Hysteria]][[Category:Youth]][[Category:Research]][[Category:Research into effects on Children]][[Category:People]][[Category:People: German]][[Category:People: Deceased]][[Category:People: Academics]][[Category:Law/Crime]][[Category:Law/Crime: German]][[Category:History & Events: German]][[Category:History & Events: 1980s]][[Category:History & Events: 1990s]][[Category:History & Events: 2020s]][[Category:History & Events: Personal Scandals]][[Category:History & Events: Moral controversies]]

Revision as of 22:58, 6 July 2023

Volkmar Sigusch (11 June 1940 – 7 February 2023) was a German sexologist, physician and sociologist. From 1973 to 2006, he was the director of the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft (Institute for Sexual Science) at the clinic of Goethe University in Frankfurt.

Sigusch studied medicine, psychology and philosophy (under Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno) in Frankfurt am Main, Berlin and Hamburg. After recieving his M.D. and PhD, he worked from 1973 as a professor at Goethe University.

In 1972, Sigusch founded the Institute for Sexology at the University Hospital in Frankfurt and was its director until his retirement and the closure of the institute in 2006. He wrote several books on sociology, psychology and sexual medicine. He was the founder and, from 1988, co-editor of the scientific, peer-reviewed journal Zeitschrift für Sexualforschung (Thieme Verlag Stuttgart and New York). From 1979 to 1986, he edited the cultural magazine Sexualität konkret.

In a 1991 publication, Die Transsexuellen und unser nosomorpher Blick ("Transsexuals and our nosomorphic view"), Sigusch coined the term cissexual (zissexuell in German). As an antonym to transsexual, cissexual refers to a person whose gender identity matches their sex. According to Wikipedia,[1] the cis/trans dichotomy predates Sigusch, having been recorded in transgender slang as far back as 1914 by Ernst Burchard in Lexikon des gesamten Sexuallebens, but only in the specific context of cross-dressing, not gender identity.

In June 2023, a few months after his death, Sigusch became the subject of normalization panic online.[2]

Relevance to MAPs and AAMs

As a medical doctor, Sigusch took a scientific, evidence-based, harm-reduction approach to non-normative sexuality which strays into the domain of criminal law ('sex offenders'). In 1979, he co-authored a paper arguing against the use of psychosurgery on sex offenders, writing: "We consider it essential that this surgery be suspended at least as long as the possible therapeutic effectiveness and the possible adverse side effects remain unclear."[3]

Sigusch was close to the Eberhard Schorsch,[4] who published extensively on sex offender research, and in 1973 argued that sexual contact between minors and older people was harmless if it was consensual (mutually willing) and did not involve force.[5] Sigusch was also close to Gunter Schmidt, who wrote the foreword ("The Debate on Paedophilia")[6] to the famous scholarly compendium on "Intergenerational Intimacy" (1991), published as a special issue in the Journal of Homosexuality.[7] As early LGBT advocates, these three influential academics reached and published supportive conclusions about homosexuals and homosexuality. They all accurately distinguished between pedophilia as an exclusive or preferential attraction, a possible identity category, and the act of intergenerational / age-gap sexual contact, deemed child sexual abuse in some legal jurisdictions and most current professional literature.

References