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Journal of the History of Sexuality 12.1 (2003) 168-169



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Notes on Contributors


Henny Brandhorst is currently librarian and researcher at the Anne Frank Foundation in Amsterdam. After completing his studies in modern history at the University of Amsterdam, he became librarian at Homodok-Lesbisch Archief Amsterdam, the International Gay and Lesbian Archive in Amsterdam. From 1991 to 1994 he co-edited Homologie, a now defunct Dutch gay and lesbian studies journal. He has published articles and review essays on the history of sexuality and on gay and lesbian culture in that journal as well as in the German gay and lesbian studies journal Forum Homosexualität und Literatur, in Gay 2001: a cultural yearbook for gay men (2000), and in A Dictionary of Dutch Gay Male Culture (forthcoming).

Richard Cleminson (Ph.D.) is Lecturer in Spanish Studies in the Department of Languages and European Studies, University of Bradford, UK. He has published on the history of sexuality and on the anarchist movement in Spain. His publications include Anarchism, Science, and Sex: Eugenics in Eastern Spain, 1900-1937 (Oxford: Peter Lang, 2000) and Anarquismo y homosexualidad (Madrid: Huerga y Fierro, 1995). He is currently working on a history of male homosexuality in Spain with Francisco Vázquez García.

Ivan Crozier was awarded the Ph.D. by the University of New South Wales, Sydney, in 2000. From 1999-2000 he was a lecturer in the History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Sydney. He is currently a Research Fellow at the Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at University College, London, and an Assistant Professor at the European College of Liberal Arts, Berlin. His research interests include the history of sexology in England, America and Europe; the uses of case histories in sexology from 1850-present; and forensic psychiatry in the late nineteenth-century. He has recently published articles on these areas in the Journal of [End Page 168] Victorian Culture, History of Science, History of Psychiatry, Social History of Medicine, and Medical History.

Ralf Dose is a researcher at the Magnus-Hirschfeld-Gesellschaft, Berlin.

Thomas F. Glick, who received his Ph.D. at Harvard in 1967, is Professor of History at Boston University, where he teaches an on-going seminar on "Darwin, Freud, and Einstein." Among his books are Einstein in Spain (1988), and the edited volumes The Comparative Reception of Darwinism (1974, 1988) and The Comparative Reception of Relativity (1987). He is interested in the history of science, especially in the comparative reception of scientific ideas.

Alison Sinclair is Professor of Modern Spanish Literature and Intellectual History, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge. Her work spans 19th- and 20th-century Spanish literature and culture, and comparative studies. Recent publications include The Deceived Husband (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993) and Uncovering the Mind: Unamuno, the Unknown and the Vicissitudes of Self (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2001). Her current research project is on the role of institutions, the press, and individuals in facilitating cultural and intellectual exchange between Spain and elsewhere in Europe.

 



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