Presses Universitaires de France - P.U.F. , Le Fil Rouge Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1976 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée à rabats éditeur crème grand In-8 1 vol. - 205 pages
10 figures dans le texte en noir et blanc 1ere édition française de 1976 "Contents, Chapitres : Préface et introduction - La théorie psychanalytique et la nature de l'orgasme - L'embryologie et la nature de la bisexualité - L'érotisme clitoridien et le cycle de réaction sexuelle chez les femelles humaines - Données supplémentaires sur l'insensibilité vaginale - Résumé - Introduction à l'anatomie sexuelle - Glossaire et bibliographie - Mary Jane Sherfey (19181983) was an American psychiatrist and writer on female sexuality, she received her medical degree from Indiana University, where she attended lectures on marriage and sexuality given by Alfred Kinsey. Sherfey had a private practice in New York City and was on the staff of the Payne Whitney Clinic of the New York Hospital Cornell Medical Center. In 1961, Sherfey's interest in female biology was intensified when she came upon the inductor theory, which demonstrated that the human embryo is female until hormonally induced to become male. Determined to popularize a fact that had lain in neglect since its discovery in the 1950s, Sherfey began researching the subject and familiarizing herself with a variety of disciplines, including embryology, anatomy, primatology and anthropology. Many of her findings appear in The Nature and Evolution of Female Sexuality, which initially took form as an article contesting the existence of vaginal orgasm, published in the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association in 1966. In her earlier works, Sherfey noted that ""the strength of the sex drive determines the force required to suppress it."" In The Nature and Evolution of Female Sexuality, she introduced the concept that ""female sexuality was an insatiable drive that had been repressed for the sake of maintaining a civilized agrarian society"" and helped to explain why knowledge of the clitoris had been ignored or forbidden for over three hundred years. (Wikipedia)" infimes traces de pliures sur la couverture sans aucune gravité, avec quelques rousseurs discretes, intérieur frais et propre, quelques rousseurs sur la première page, cela reste un bon exemplaire
Sherfey (Mary Jane), sur - Catherine Kestemberg (traduction) - Marcel Heiman, Judith S. Kestenberg, Therese Benedek et Sylvan Keiser - Daniel S. Jaffe - Jules Glenn et Eugene H. Kaplan - Burness E. Moore - Marjorie C. Barnett - Douglas W. Orr
Reference : 86674
(1976)
Presses Universitaires de France - P.U.F. , Le Fil Rouge Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1976 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée à rabats éditeur crème grand In-8 1 vol. - 259 pages
1ere édition française de 1976 "Contents, Chapitres : Avertissement - Marcel Heiman, Judith S. Kestenberg, Therese Benedek et Sylvan Keiser : Table ronde - Judith S. Kestenberg : Le dehors et le dedans, le masculin et le féminin - Daniel S. Jaffe : L'envie masculine pour la fonction procréatrice de la femme - Jules Glenn et Eugene H. Kaplan : Différents types d'orgasmes chez les femmes, réexamen et redéfinitions critiques - Marcel Heinan : Sexualité féminine, introduction - Burness E. Moore : Réflexions psychanalytiques sur les implications des récentes études physiologiques de l'orgasme de la femme - Marjorie C. Barnett : Nouvelles considérations sur les conséquences psychiques des différences anatomiques et physiologiques entre les sexes - Douglas W. Orr : Notes anthropologiques et historiques sur le rôle sexuel de la femme - Mary Jane Sherfey (19181983) was an American psychiatrist and writer on female sexuality, she received her medical degree from Indiana University, where she attended lectures on marriage and sexuality given by Alfred Kinsey. Sherfey had a private practice in New York City and was on the staff of the Payne Whitney Clinic of the New York Hospital Cornell Medical Center. In 1961, Sherfey's interest in female biology was intensified when she came upon the inductor theory, which demonstrated that the human embryo is female until hormonally induced to become male. Determined to popularize a fact that had lain in neglect since its discovery in the 1950s, Sherfey began researching the subject and familiarizing herself with a variety of disciplines, including embryology, anatomy, primatology and anthropology. Many of her findings appear in The Nature and Evolution of Female Sexuality, which initially took form as an article contesting the existence of vaginal orgasm, published in the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association in 1966. In her earlier works, Sherfey noted that ""the strength of the sex drive determines the force required to suppress it."" In The Nature and Evolution of Female Sexuality, she introduced the concept that ""female sexuality was an insatiable drive that had been repressed for the sake of maintaining a civilized agrarian society"" and helped to explain why knowledge of the clitoris had been ignored or forbidden for over three hundred years. (Wikipedia)" légère trainée discrète dans la longueur et quelques rousseurs sur le plat supérieur de la couverture, sinon bon exemplaire, intérieur frais et propre