欧洲东部的性知识和专业知识:跨国交流

K. Líšková, Kate Fisher
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摘要

自 19 世纪 70 年代起,中东欧地区在性科学的发展过程中发挥了至关重要的作用。西格蒙德-弗洛伊德(生于弗赖贝格/普日堡)、马格努斯-赫希菲尔德(生于科尔贝格/科洛布热格)和卡尔-玛丽亚-克特贝尼(生于维也纳,常驻布达佩斯)等具有影响力的知名人物的生平事迹揭示了中东欧地区与后来的西欧之间的帝国联系。1932 年,世界性改革联盟在布尔诺召开大会(此前曾在柏林、伦敦、维也纳和哥本哈根举行过会议),当时该协会已在波兰、奥地利和捷克斯洛伐克等地区建立了分支机构。同年,波兰宣布同性恋行为合法化。然而,中东欧地区在性学史上往往被忽视,人们对这些地区的性科学如何塑造全球知识生产网络以及如何被全球知识生产网络所塑造知之甚少。事实上,尽管最近有人试图展示性科学如何成为一项真正的全球性事业,但中东欧地区仍未被完全纳入我们对全球性学对话与交流网络的描绘之中1 。历史学家往往误解了 1945 年前后中东欧地区性科学的跨国性质。首先,许多历史著作倾向于关注少数关键先驱(克拉夫特-艾宾、马格努斯-赫希菲尔德、西格蒙德-弗洛伊德和哈维洛克-埃利斯),这掩盖了中东欧人对欧洲科学交流文化的贡献。第二,人们假定,第二次世界大战后,随着冷战的爆发,中东欧地区的性科学在很大程度上被切断了与国际知识交流网络的联系。2 第三,人们先入为主地认为,共产主义专制政府限制了政治自由和经济创业精神,必然也会对性表达采取压制态度。3 第四,将 1989 年作为一个基本的停顿期,助长了一种时期划分,未能引起人们对 1945 年至 1989 年期间围绕性政治的跨国知识交流模式的变化的足够重视,也未能发现将当代世界的性政治与共产主义时期的性政治联系起来的关键连续性。正如本论坛的文章所揭示的,这些假设都经不起推敲。最近,学者们对该地区性历史的兴趣大增,4 在此基础上,我们汇集了一系列论文,详细介绍了当地性专家在国家社会主义之前和期间创造性知识的跨国联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sexual Knowledge and Expertise in Europe's East: Transnational Exchanges
East Central Europe played a crucial role in shaping the development of sexual science from the 1870s onwards. The life-histories of influential and well-known figures such as Sigmund Freud (born in Freiberg/Příbor), Magnus Hirschfeld (born in Kolberg/Kolobrzeg) and Karl Maria Kertbeny (born in Vienna, based in Budapest) reveal the imperial interconnectedness of East Central Europe with what would become Western Europe. By 1932, when the World League for Sexual Reform held its congress in Brno (following previous meetings in Berlin, London, Vienna, and Copenhagen), the society had established branches across the region, including Poland, Austria, and Czechoslovakia. In that same year, Poland decriminalised homosexual acts. Yet, East Central Europe is often neglected in the history of sexology and little is known about how sexual science in these regions shaped, and was shaped by, global networks of knowledge production. Indeed, despite recent attempts to demonstrate the ways in which sexual science was a truly global enterprise, East Central Europe remains to be fully incorporated into our mapping of the global networks of sexological dialogue and exchange.1 This is especially true of scholarship on the period after the Second World War. Historians have tended to misconstrue the transnational nature of sexual science in East Central Europe both before and after 1945. First, the contribution of East Central Europeans to European cultures of scientific exchanges has been obscured by the tendency of much historical writing to focus on a small number of key pioneers (Krafft-Ebing, Magnus Hirschfeld, Sigmund Freud and Havelock Ellis). Second, it is assumed that East Central European sexual science was largely cut off from international networks of knowledge exchange after the Second World War following the onset of the Cold War.2 Third, there are preconceived notions that communist authoritarian governments, having curtailed political freedoms and economic entrepreneurialism, must have also taken a repressive stance against sexual expression.3 Fourth, the dominance of 1989 as the fundamental caesura has encouraged a periodisation that fails to draw enough attention to the shifts in transnational patterns of knowledge exchange around sexual politics during the period 1945 to 1989 and fails to identify key continuities that link the sexual politics of the contemporary world with those of the communist period. None of these assumptions can withstand scrutiny, as the articles in this forum reveal. Building on a recent boost in scholarly interest in the sexual histories of the region,4 we present a collection of papers that each detail the transnational connections of local sexual experts in creating sexual knowledge both before and during state socialism.5
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