TY - CHAP AB - The medical suppression of female sexuality in Victorian society has long been the subject of historical and cultural scholarship, with documentation not only of textual threats by religious and medical “experts,” but also of surgical assaults on female reproductive systems (Longo, 1979, 1986; Scull & Favreau, 1986; Sheehan, 1997). Less well known is the apparent obverse: the use of medical techniques to stimulate the female genitalia as a means of treating hysteria and other mental disorders (Maines, 1999; Schleiner, 1995). In this paper, I trace the cultural history (mainly Anglo-American) of the psychiatric enhancement, as well as repression, of female sexual pleasure, through various genital treatments, including the surgical and the electrical.1I then make the case that these “opposite” treatments are, in the context of Victorian society, two sides of the same coin of the patriarchal, medical control of female sexuality.2 VL - 8 SN - 978-0-76231-088-3, 978-1-84950-256-6/1529-2126 DO - 10.1016/S1529-2126(04)08006-3 UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/S1529-2126(04)08006-3 AU - Warren Carol A.B ED - Marcia Texler Segal ED - Vasilikie Demos ED - Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld PY - 2004 Y1 - 2004/01/01 TI - GENITAL SURGERIES AND STIMULATION IN NINETEENTH CENTURY PSYCHIATRY T2 - Gendered Perspectives on Reproduction and Sexuality T3 - Advances in Gender Research PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 165 EP - 197 Y2 - 2024/04/24 ER -