Sexual Knowledge: Feeling, Fact, and Social Reform in Vienna, 1900-1934
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Vienna’s unique intellectual, political, and religious traditions had a powerful impact on the transformation of sexual knowledge in the early twentieth century. Whereas turn-of-the-century sexology, as practiced in Vienna as a medical science, sought to classify and heal individuals, during the interwar years, sexual knowledge was employed by a variety of actors to heal the social body: the truncated, diseased, and impoverished population of the newly created Republic of Austria. Based on rich source material, this book charts cultural changes that are hallmarks of the modern era, such as the rise of the companionate marriage, the role of expert advice in intimate matters, and the body as a source of pleasure and anxiety. These changes are evidence of a dramatic shift in attitudes from a form of scientific inquiry largely practiced by medical specialists to a social reform movement led by and intended for a wider audience that included workers, women, and children.
Britta McEwen
Britta McEwen teaches European History at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska.
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Sexual Knowledge - Britta McEwen
SEXUAL KNOWLEDGE
AUSTRIAN AND HABSBURG STUDIES
General Editor: Gary B. Cohen, Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota
Volume 1
Austrian Women in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives
Edited by David F. Good, Margarete Grandner, and Mary Jo Maynes
Volume 2
From World War to Waldheim: Culture and Politics in Austria and the United States
Edited by David F. Good and Ruth Wodak
Volume 3
Rethinking Vienna 1900
Edited by Steven Beller
Volume 4
The Great Tradition and its Legacy: The Evolution of Dramatic and Musical
Theater in Austria and Central Europe
Edited by Michael Cherlin, Halina Filipowicz, and RIchard L. Rudolph
Volume 5
Creating the Other: Ethnic Conflict and Nationalism in Habsburg Central Europe
Edited by Nancy M. Wingfield
Volume 6
Constructing Nationalities in East Central Europe
Edited by Pieter M. Judson and Marsha L. Rozenblit
Volume 7
The Environment and Sustainable Development in the New Central Europe
Edited by Zbigniew Bochniarz and Gary B. Cohen
Volume 8
Crime, Jews and News: Vienna 1890–1914
Edited by Daniel Mark Vyletta
Volume 9
The Limits of Loyalty: Imperial Symbolism, Popular Allegiances, and State Patriotism in the Late Habsburg Monarchy
Edited by Laurence Cole and Daniel L. Unowsky
Volume 10
Embodiments of Power: Building Baroque Cities in Europe
Edited by Gary B. Cohen and Franz A. J. Szabo
Volume 11
Diversity and Dissent: Negotiating Religious Differences in Central Europe, 1500–1800
Edited by Howard Louthan, Gary B. Cohen, and Franz A. J. Szabo
Volume 12
Vienna is Different
: Jewish Writers in Austria from the Fin de Siècle to the Present
Hillary Hope Herzog
Volume 13
Sexual Knowledge: Feeling, Fact, and Social Reform in Vienna, 1900–1934
Britta McEwen
Volume 14
Journeys Into Madness: Mapping Mental Illness in the Austro-Hungarian Empire
Edited by Gemma Blackshaw and Sabine Wieber
Volume 15
Territorial Revisionism and the Allies of Germany in the World War
Edited by Marina Cattaruzza, Stefan Dyroff and Dieter Langewiesche
Volume 16
The Viennese Café and Fin-de-Siècle Culture
Edited by Charlotte Ashby, Tag Gronberg and Simon Shaw-Miller
Volume 17
Understanding Multiculturalism: The Habsburg Central European Experience
Edited by Johannes Feichtinger and Gary B. Cohen
Volume 18
Sacrifice and Rebirth: The Legacy of the Last Habsburg War
Edited by Mark Cornwall and John Paul Newman
Volume 19
Tropics of Vienna: Colonial Utopias of the Habsburg Empire
Ulrich E. Bach
SEXUAL KNOWLEDGE
Feeling, Fact, and Social Reform in Vienna, 1900–1934
Britta McEwen
First edition published in 2012 by
Berghahn Books
www.berghahnbooks.com
© 2012, 2016 Britta McEwen
First paperback published in 2016
All rights reserved. Except for the quotation of short passages
for the purposes of criticism and review, no part of this book
may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or
mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information
storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented,
without written permission of the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
McEwen, Britta, 1973-
Sexual knowledge : feeling, fact, and social reform in Vienna, 1900–1934 / Britta McEwen.
p. cm. – (Austrian and Habsburg studies ; v. 13)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-85745-337-2 (hardcover) – ISBN (paperback) 978-1-78533-037-7 – ISBN 978-0-85745-338-9 (ebook)
1. Sexology–Austria–Vienna–History. 2. Sex instruction–Austria–Vienna–History.
3. Social problems–Austria--Vienna–History. I. Title.
HQ18.A9M35 2012
306.709436’13–dc23 2011037634
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-0-85745-337-2 (hardback)
ISBN 978-1-78533-037-7 (paperback)
ISBN 978-0-85745-338-9 (ebook)
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Introduction Vienna as a Laboratory for Sexual Knowledge
Chapter 1 City Hall and Sexual Hygiene in Red Vienna
Chapter 2 Sexual Education Debates in Late Imperial and Republican Vienna
Chapter 3 Popular Sexual Knowledge for and about Women
Chapter 4 Clinic Culture
Chapter 5 Emotional Responses: Hugo Bettauer’s Vienna Weeklies
Chapter 6 Local Reform on an International Stage: The World League for Sexual Reform in Vienna
Conclusion Sexual Knowledge between Science and Social Reform
Bibliography
Index
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Iwould like to thank the UCLA Graduate Division and Department of History for tremendous support in the early days of this project. Travel grants from the UCLA Center for the Study of Women, the UCLA Center for European and Russian Studies, and the Berkeley Center for European Studies enabled me to make many trips to central Europe. A Creighton University Faculty Research Fellowship and a Paul Klemperer Fellowship from the New York Academy of Medicine helped me track down several medical sources once back in the United States. I am indebted to the Fulbright Commission of Austria for accepting and supporting my academic interests while in Vienna. Finally, I am grateful to several publishers for allowing me to publish substantially revised and updated versions of research that has appeared elsewhere. Parts of chapter 1 are reprinted with permission from an article that was first published in the Austrian History Yearbook (Volume XVI 2010). Sections of chapter 2 first appeared in two publications: Sharing Sexual Knowledge: A Cultural History of Sex Education in Twentieth Century Europe and North America (London: Routledge, 2009) and Sexualität, Unterschichtenmilieus und ArbeiterInnenbewegung (Leipzig: Akademische Verlagsanstalt, 2003).
In Austria, I wish to thank the unflagging and suspiciously cheerful staff at the National Bibliothek, who never limited my requests nor blinked at their titles. I am also very grateful to the staffs at the Archive der österreichischen Arbeiterbewegung, the Gesellschaft der Ärzte in Wien, and the Stadt- und Landesarchiv for the city of Vienna. I also enjoyed the encouragement of Viennese scholars and feminists Sandra Eder, Maria Mesner, Sonja Niederacher, Karin Riegler, and Annemarie Steidl. Most of all, I wish to thank Gundi Herold, who led me into the Wienerwald every week for constitutionals, language lessons, and loving moral support during my times in Vienna.
In the United States, I am particularly grateful to the members of my dissertation committee and the regular attendees of the UCLA European History Colloquium. I cannot overemphasize my intellectual and human debt to David Sabean; he has been a true Doktor-Vater and inspiration. It is to him that I owe my introduction to Ann Przyzycki DeVita at Berghahn Books, who in turn found two attentive and constructive readers for my manuscript. I am very grateful for their comments. Finally, I was lucky enough to enter UCLA with a cohort that has challenged and upheld me. Their society has shaped my scholarship more than anything else. My special thanks to Amy Woodson-Boulton, Claudia Verhoeven, Andrea Mansker, and Patricia Tilburg.
My deepest gratitude remains to the family and friends who supported me through the process of writing this book: the Slobodas, the Shoups, Amy Turbes, Christy Rentmeester, Betsy Elliot-Meisel, Julie Fox, Jean McEwen, Jamie McEwen, Nana Olivas, Kristin Justice, and Erik Lund. This book is dedicated to my long-suffering parents, Carol McEwen and Matthew Zukowski, whom I will never be able to repay.
Introduction
VIENNA AS A LABORATORY FOR SEXUAL KNOWLEDGE
Prelude
For much of the year 1900, eighteen-year-old Ida Bauer spent an hour a day with her doctor, Sigmund Freud. Freud had been hired by Bauer’s father, whom he had already treated for syphilis several years earlier. Freud’s task in treating Ida Bauer, however, was to discover the source of the hysteria she suffered from, which left her with a dry cough, a limp, and occasional vaginal discharge. She was also entertaining suicidal thoughts. Bauer explained to Freud her relationships with Herr and Frau K., family friends who, Bauer maintained, had acted inappropriately towards her. In the course of their conversations, Bauer spoke openly to Freud about the sexual issues that seemed to undergird her relationship to the Ks. Herr K., she claimed, had made sexual advances towards her while both families were vacationing in the Sudtirol. Frau K., on the other hand, had befriended her, perhaps, Ida thought now, in order to better obtain access to Ida’s father, with whom Ida believed she was having an affair.
Ida Bauer’s father had his own ideas about what was causing his daughter’s mental distress. Frau K. had warned him that his daughter was preoccupied with sexual knowledge and had spent her vacation days reading sexologist Paolo Mantegazza’s Physiology of Love and other books of that sort.
¹ Ida’s imagination, her father postulated, had become over-excited by such reading material and had fabricated a seduction scene with Herr K. out of the thin mountain air. Using dream analysis, the concept of sexual sublimation, and his new theory of repression, Freud came to similar, if more complex, conclusions. Ida, still maintaining her version of the story, left Freud’s care abruptly on New Year’s Eve, 1900. Five years later, Freud published Ida Bauer’s case history (renaming her Dora
), which became a pillar of psychoanalytic theory.
Both Freud and the Bauers have great significance for the history explored in this book. Freud’s role as the leader of a psychoanalytic movement that revolutionized mental health care and the ways in which the western world thinks about sex makes him both an historical actor in the history of Vienna and a methodological model for the history of sexuality. The Bauer family also played a further role in the history of Vienna. Ida Bauer experienced depression as an adult and sought psychoanalytic treatment again in the interwar years. During that time her brother, Otto Bauer, led the Austrian Social Democratic Workers’ Party (henceforth SDAP) through the tumultuous political changes of Austria’s First Republic, 1918 to 1934. His party held the majority on Vienna’s city council and was able to remake wide swaths of the city’s geography and cultural landscape in radical and innovative ways. Aside from pockets of support in Austria’s provincial capitals, however, the SDAP’s power was isolated. The Austrian countryside during the First Republic voted overwhelmingly in favor for the Christian Social Party (CSP), which engaged in a Kulturkampf with the SDAP that eventually resulted in the brief Civil War of 1934, after which Otto Bauer and the rest of his party’s leadership fled to Brno, in the new state of Czechoslovakia. Four years later, Sigmund Freud left Vienna at the insistence of the National Socialists, who controlled Austria from 1938 to 1945.
The remarkably turbulent political events that are encompassed within this story, from the demise of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, through World War I and the founding of the Austrian Republic, and finally to the violent regime changes of the 1930s, have the ability to overshadow Vienna’s rich cultural history. In this book, however, these events serve as the political background to an examination of sexual knowledge in Vienna. I will argue that the production and distribution of sexual knowledge in Vienna underwent a dramatic shift during the years 1900 to 1934: from a form of scientific inquiry practiced largely by medical specialists to a social reform issue engaged by and intended for a wide audience.
Let us return for a moment to Ida Bauer in 1900. It is clear that whatever went wrong for her that summer in the Alps, it revolved around questions about sexual knowledge and behavior. In his conversations with Ida Bauer that fall, Freud repeatedly questioned the extent of sexual knowledge she possessed and the nature of the sexual behavior she believed was taking place around her. What had she been reading that summer? What did Herr K. want from her? Was the relationship between her father and Frau K. sexual? How did her father’s history of venereal infection and professed impotence affect his ability to conduct a romantic affair? When Freud published these inquiries five years later, he was very aware that fellow physicians would react with astonishment and horror
to the plain ways in which he had discussed sexual matters with an eighteen-year-old girl from a middle-class family.² Freud defended himself from would-be critics by making the bold assertion that it was possible for a man to talk to girls and women upon sexual matters of every kind without doing them harm and without bringing suspicion upon himself,
so long as one did so in a dry and direct manner and could make them feel convinced that it [was] unavoidable.
³ Indeed, Freud predicated his treatment of Ida Bauer on the belief that hysteria could not be cured without discussing sexual matters. Bringing sexual matters into the open disarmed them, according to Freud. Any injury sexual topics caused on a conscious level was preferable to the far greater damage they could have as unconscious ideas or fantasies. Talking about sex was necessary for psychoanalytic treatment. Rather than tip-toe around the subject, Freud recommended a different tack: The right attitude is: ‘pour faire une omelette il faut casser des oeufs.’
⁴
The social pretense of respectable women’s ignorance of sexual matters was one of the eggs that Freud cracked while constructing his theories of sexuality and the unconscious. Feminist critics of Freud have further suggested that Ida Bauer herself was cracked
by Freud, a casualty of his assumptions about women.⁵ This book will not engage in those controversies. The questions that surrounded Ida Bauer’s treatment, however, invite us to think about the history of sexual knowledge in Vienna and its importance to the city’s larger history. Both contemporary social critics and modern historians of fin-de-siècle Vienna have described it as a city suffused with sex.⁶ However, this description disappears in the post-Imperial historiography of the city. Certainly sex was at the heart of the conversations in which Freud engaged Ida Bauer: what she knew, where she had received her knowledge, and why she believed certain sexual behavior to be improper. This book is at base an attempt to apply these questions to a wider range of historical actors in Vienna, including those who inherited the former Imperial capital: the citizens of the First Republic.
The Problem
The history of sexual knowledge in Vienna established in this book is the result of a series of inquiries into both urban and epistemological cultural changes. Its story is concerned with the ways knowledge about sex was made and shared in Vienna, beginning with the explosion of sexual science in the late Imperial period and ending with the incomplete cultural revolution wrought by the SDAP, which ended in 1934. First, I have focused on the shift in the purpose of sexual knowledge in Vienna, as understood by those who created and disseminated it. Whereas fin-de-siècle sexology sought to classify and heal individuals as a medical science, sexual knowledge in the interwar years was employed to heal the social body: the truncated, diseased, and impoverished population of the newly created Republic of Austria. This shift refocused sexual knowledge away from sexological taxonomies of aberrant sexual behaviors and towards advising heterosexual, reproductive couples, whom numerous social reform movements targeted as central to the regeneration of society. Imagining and implementing national regeneration through such citizens meant that bodies, hygiene, families, and reproduction would need to be redefined and restructured to fit the needs of the new state. Much as Freud had done in his treatment of Ida Bauer, the young Republic would have to talk about sex in radically new ways. Second, I have sought to explain how the discourse of sexual danger, especially regarding venereal infection, intensified in Vienna during the first third of the twentieth century. I argue that this intensification was the direct result of World War I and the ensuing concern that women and children would be infected with venereal disease (VD) carried by returning soldiers. Particular kinds of narratives were used to express sexual danger to both medical and popular audiences. I will also call attention to the employment of emotional testimonies and melodrama by those who wished to illustrate sexual danger in disease, reproduction, or ignorance. Throughout the story told here, I emphasize the politically and culturally specific context of sexual knowledge in Vienna. Unlike other European capitals, Vienna did not produce a body of pronatalist legislation or ideology during the years 1900 to 1934.⁷ Likewise, despite Austria’s overwhelmingly Roman Catholic population and the strength of political Catholicism on a national level, contraception advice, distribution, and research were both legal and widespread during the First Republic. I will argue that developments such as these were made possible by Vienna’s position as the successive capital of two very unusual countries; the Austro-Hungarian Empire, a supra-national and polyglot entity, and the Republic of Austria, a nation that no native political party supported. In both cases, Vienna stood apart as a state within a state, with a politics and culture distinct from the larger political body.
Methodology
The most significant methodological choice I have made in this work is to limit the range of inquiry to a city, rather than a nation. Although my research is inspired by the growing literature that links sexuality to nationalism, I have not found this approach to be useful in thinking about either the Austro-Hungarian Empire or the First Austrian Republic.⁸ Instead, I have treated Vienna as the most politically and culturally contested space within both regimes. The primary political opponents in the struggle to produce and control sexual knowledge in Vienna, from 1900 to 1934, were those of social democracy and political Catholicism. Neither political party could be described as nationalistic.⁹ Both developed out of nineteenth-century, multi-national Imperial conditions; when the Empire was dismantled after World War I, both parties favored union with Germany over the creation of an independent Austria. Yet lack of native nationalism did not lead any of Austria’s politicians to doubt Vienna’s position as a world capital.¹⁰ Before the World War I, Vienna was governed by the Christian Social Party and was the jewel of the Empire’s golden triangle
of capitals. After the war, the city was recognized as a province of Austria, granted the right to self-taxation, and controlled by the SDAP. Unlike any other European capital, interwar Vienna was socialist-run through and through, a kind of exhibition piece for what could be achieved in the name of the working class. Throughout the First Republic, however, armed militias representing socialists, Catholics, communists, and monarchists clashed in street skirmishes, culminating in a civil war whose last battles were fought in Vienna’s municipal housing complexes. The extraordinary position of Vienna during the years 1900 to 1934 makes a study circumscribed by nationalist concepts irrelevant.
My methodological approach to the problem of sexual knowledge in Vienna has been shaped by my sources, the bulk of which have been published. These include hundreds of sex manuals, advice columns, Catholic theological texts, medical journals, children’s sexual education pamphlets, and municipal reports. Where possible, I have sought out the records of the associations that produced this body of literature, which has allowed me to look at the way that sex became a reform movement. These associational records provide me with a picture of how people performed the act of organization: what their meetings were like, where their money came from, what rules they created for themselves. Finally, I have used documents from city, state, and political party archives. These include city administration records, personnel records, clinic forms, and propaganda materials.¹¹
I approach sexual knowledge from the position of cultural history. Rather than define a sexuality
for early twentieth-century Vienna, I have sought to understand how people in Vienna thought about sex, what they did with that knowledge, and how that knowledge changed over time. To do so, I have employed three major analytical tools. The first is an analysis of contemporary discourses of sexual knowledge.¹² Discursive analysis, most famously employed by Michel Foucault, forces the historian to suspend temporarily all the points of view of a given debate, making them momentarily equal and divorcing them from any eventual truth
or outcome. This exercise allows the historian to study the components of a past debate, the relationships between ideas, the format of information, and any attempts to control or limit discussion. Discursive analysis is especially useful for my project because it breaks down the distinctions between hard sciences, like biology, and soft or pseudo
sciences, such as eugenics.¹³ These distinctions among sexual knowledge, perhaps clear to modern historians, were extremely fluid in the early twentieth century. By taking seriously the multiplicity of beliefs about sexual behavior and the moral and hygienic consequences thereof, I am better able to recreate the cultural context of sexual knowledge in Vienna as it was understood by the historical actors who shaped it.
My approach to sexual discourse employs two further analytical tools. The first is the concept of a horizon of possibility,
originally used by Lucien Febvre to investigate the mental life of historical subjects.¹⁴ Carlo Ginzburg has invoked a horizon of possibility in culture,
to defend historical investigations of individuals who might not be representative of the dominant culture, but nevertheless help historians to think about the limits of what was possible to think in a given era.¹⁵ I have adapted this concept to think about the significance of some of the unusual sources I have uncovered and the often-marginalized authors or sex reform groups that produced them. Using a horizon of possibility has helped me work with many kinds of published sexual knowledge, particularly those texts without edition histories. Without such evidence, it is difficult to construct an argument about the popular reception of some of the most innovative sexual information produced in Vienna. I have approached these texts as delineators of what was possible when people wrote and reasoned about sex. The second analytical addition to discursive analysis employed in this work is the concept of emotional regimes,
which has been most fully defined by William Reddy.¹⁶ This method of analysis identifies the systems within a society that govern the ways its citizens are asked to feel. I chose to use the methods of emotional history because my sources revolve around emotion: seduction and betrayal, romantic and familial love, fear of childbirth, and so on. Much of the sexual information available in early twentieth-century Vienna was conveyed in melodramatic language that appealed to the individual’s sense of justice and responsibility. I have used the concept of emotional regimes to identify which emotions were discussed in relation to sex, as well as the social attitudes and personal attributes that combined to make possible desired (or undesired) emotions about sex and sex knowledge. My methodology is designed to illuminate the possibilities open to Viennese historical actors as they thought, felt, and communicated sexual knowledge.
Historiography
Modern Austrian history has been written to explain failure: the failure of Liberalism in the late nineteenth century and Social Democracy in the interwar years; the decline of empirical thought and the rise of irrationalism among intellectual elites; the loss of World War I and the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire; the failure of Jewish assimilation and the rise of anti-Semitism; and the inability to create a culture of nationalism that might have prevented the Anschluß with Germany in 1938. This approach has usefully exploited the numerous failures of Austrian history and used them as entry points of political and cultural explanation.
Carl Schorske transformed the explanatory model of failure into one of crisis and cultural innovation in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna: Politics and Culture, which argues that the Liberal bourgeoisie of late Imperial Vienna retreated into aesthetics and intellectual life in response to an increasingly frozen parliamentary system and the rise of the CSP in Vienna.¹⁷ Schorske drew upon the increase of political irrationalism and the cultural legacy of Roman Catholicism to explain Viennese cultural modernism as struggle between Sein und Schein: reality and illusion,
or being and appearing.
This has been an enormously profitable avenue for historians, and a great deal of the recent historiography of Vienna has been written in dialogue with or as a critique of Schorske’s work. Schorske’s use of cultural figures to illuminate political and intellectual shifts has been appropriated by historians and extended to studies of Ludwig Wittgenstein, Karl Kraus, Richard von Krafft-Ebing, and Otto Weininger.¹⁸ John Boyer has worked to clarify the voting patterns of the Viennese Liberal bourgeoisie, and has shown that in many cases the class base identified by Schorske actually voted against Liberalism and for CSP politicians like Karl Lueger, who won his first election in 1895 and served as Vienna’s mayor from 1897 to 1910.¹⁹ Wolfgang Maderthaner and Lutz Musner have studied the social, cultural, and economic ruptures that separated Vienna’s elite inner city from the working-class Vorstadt.²⁰ Harriet Anderson questioned the paucity of women in the cultural historiography of late Imperial Vienna, and has used her study of Viennese women’s movements to suggest that some contemporary political drives transcended a Liberal/Catholic split.²¹ Finally, historians Ivar Oxaal and Michael Pollack have criticized Schorske for his reluctance to credit Vienna’s Jewish presence (10 percent of the population in 1900) with meaning other than as the victims of antisemitism.²² This critique is carried out most fully by Steven Beller, who has used the Gymnasium records of late Imperial Vienna to establish that over 50 percent of graduates from a liberal bourgeois background who qualified to enter university, and thus practice culture-shaping professions, were Jewish.²³
Historians of anti-Semitism in Austria have led the process of extending cultural histories of Vienna into the interwar years. Austrian and American historians have explored the culture of interwar Vienna, which was dominated by a deepening political polarization, by emphasizing political theory, crisis, and violence.²⁴ Anton Pelinka has explained political culture in the First Republic as a Lager System, in which the SDAP, CSP, and Pan-German Party functioned as camps that socialized members through youth groups, educational programs, and cultural organizations, binding individuals into deep patterns of membership that, on a national level, resulted in a centrifugal democracy
in which consensus was impossible.²⁵ In this sense, interwar Austria was very similar to Weimar Germany. Many historians have worked to define this political camp system and establish its effects on city life in Vienna. Josef Weidenholzer has argued that the education innovations and worker festivities sponsored by the SDAP were conscious efforts to uproot and replace Catholic patterns of culture in Vienna.²⁶ Conversely, Melanie A. Sully has interpreted the SDAP’s focus on socio-cultural reform as a sign of the party’s inability to effect political change on a national level.²⁷ This criticism is implicit in Helmut Gruber’s work, which shows that the translation of Austromarxist ideals into social reform in interwar Austria was marked by an oftentimes clumsy, top-down approach by the SDAP to its working-class constituency.²⁸ The persistence of religious belief in the daily life of socialist-controlled Vienna in the interwar period has been explored by historians, as have the limits of socialist reform vis-à-vis women.²⁹ This literature has been central to helping me frame sexual reform within the volatile political context of interwar Austria.
As will become clear in the following chapters, a wide range of actors were drawn to the project of making public basic information about sex. Catholics, socialists, and others worked to improve the health of the people, mental and physical, by creating and disseminating sexual knowledge. But particularly in the First Republic, sex information became politicized. Catholics emphasized purity and chastity (for the glory of God) when explaining sex to their audiences; socialists largely echoed these messages while appealing to the health of the greater population and the importance of upright, clean living. So while both sides may have justified their actions differently, the end goal was very similar. Like many of their Weimar colleagues, sex reformers in Vienna were committed to creating a viable Volk through hygiene and education. Unlike many Berlin progressives, however, the Viennese showed a grudging appreciation for the power of the Roman Catholic Church to structure sexual forms of knowledge in terms of confession and revelation. This uneasy cohabitation between a Catholic heritage and a socialist future in interwar Vienna gave a different nuance to the discourse of sex reform than was found in Weimar Germany, particularly when it came to the issue of abortion, as we shall see. The bi-polar politics of interwar Austria left deep marks in what could be achieved in the realm of sexual knowledge.
Because the Austrian Republic was so fragile and so bitterly contested, historians have been largely unable to approach interwar history in a non-partisan way: that is, without setting up political winners and losers to be championed or reviled. The composite result has been a doomsday-narrative of the Republic for all parties involved: the fall of socialist Vienna in 1934, the betrayal of Christian Social ideals by the clerico-fascist wing that led the Christliche Ständestaat (Christian Corporate State
) of 1934 to 1938, the mutinous putsch attempts against the Ständestaat led by Austrian National Socialists, and the Anschluß invasion of Austria by Nazi Germany in 1938. This narrative divides interwar Austrian culture between political enemies and makes it very difficult to uncover shared concerns or discussions. This book tries to mitigate the weight of interwar Austria’s doomsday narrative in two ways. First, I have approached sexual knowledge in Vienna as a process that spans the late Imperial and Republican periods, producing a heterogeneous corpus of research and reform that was still very fluid in 1934. Second, I have chosen a very political topic—sex—and attempted to show how it transcended traditional political boundaries in interwar Vienna. Sex research and reform in the period my book covers was an international undertaking, avidly followed by scientists and activists eager to apply new methods in Vienna. Within Austria, sexual knowledge production and distribution divided opinion within parties and occasionally drew erstwhile political enemies together. Clearly, this is not a book that seeks to explain the failure of Austrian liberalism in the fin-de-siècle or even the eventual ecstatic reception of Adolf Hitler in 1938. Rather, it underlines some of the cultural continuities between these events and suggests an alternate sphere of work and activism that expanded in this time frame.
Because the larger argument of this book posits a shift in sexual knowledge that has not been addressed in the historiography, I want to use fuller historical narratives to introduce my understanding of sex as a science and as a social reform movement. In the next two sections, I wish to set up the key issues and historiography surrounding these problems.
Sex as Science
Nineteenth-century medical authorities and specialists who theorized about sex were known as sexologists. Working from anatomical, hormonal, and inheritable models of human wellness and abnormality, sexologists attempted to map out the entire range of human sexual preference and behavior. They did so with very little recourse to individual psychic drives, resting their findings instead on the physiological information that was being produced in centers of medical learning across Europe. Many sexologists, including Havelock Ellis in England and Magnus Hirschfeld in Germany, argued for the normalization of non-procreative desires and the abolition of anti-homosexual legislation. However, sexology also drew from the ground-breaking work of Bénédict Augustin Morel (Theory of Degeneration, 1857) and Cesare Lombroso (Criminal Man, 1876) to argue that non-procreative sexual activities were not (merely) immoral choices but rather symptoms of degeneration: inherited tendencies that played out in the sexual lives of abnormal or atavistic human beings.³⁰ This approach to sexual behavior transformed sexual activities, such as same-sex penetration, into sexual identities, such as homosexuality. Sexology suggested that sexual activity, including perverse activity (defined as that which did not have coitus as its goal) was determined by natural laws. In doing so, sexology challenged the authority of Church and state to define sexual issues. Rather than require penance or legal penalty from individuals who engaged in abnormal sexual practices, sexology argued that they deserved scientific study and, in some cases, medical treatment.
As literary critic Rita Felski has pointed out, the world of sexual science created in the nineteenth century brings to mind sepia-tinted images of earnest Victorian scholars laboring over lists of sexual perversions with the taxonomical zeal of an entomologist examining insects.
³¹ Indeed, perhaps the most famous sexological study produced in this period was a taxonomy. University of Vienna Professor of Psychiatry Richard von Krafft-Ebing’s Psychopathia sexualis, first published in 1886, detailed a world of sexual perversion and abnormality. Psychopathia sexualis began as a slim, 110-page thinking-through of the relationship between legal structures and medical authorities in criminal cases involving sexual activity. Krafft-Ebing revised the text eleven times before his death in 1902, adding new definitions