Non­fic­tion

The Ein­stein of Sex: Dr. Mag­nus Hirschfeld, the Vision­ary of Weimar Berlin

  • Review
June 26, 2024

More than a cen­tu­ry ago, Dr. Mag­nus Hirschfeld, dubbed the Ein­stein of Sex,” grew famous (and infa­mous) for his lib­er­at­ing the­o­ry of sex­u­al rel­a­tiv­i­ty. Today, he’s been large­ly forgotten.

Jour­nal­ist Daniel Brook retraces Hirschfeld’s rol­lick­ing life and rein­vig­o­rates his lega­cy, recov­er­ing one of the great vision­ar­ies of the twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry. In an era when gay sex was a crime and gen­der roles rigid, Hirschfeld taught that each of us is their own unique mix­ture of mas­culin­i­ty and fem­i­nin­i­ty. Through his pub­lic advo­ca­cy for gay rights and his pri­vate coun­sel­ing of patients toward self-accep­tance, he became the intel­lec­tu­al impre­sario of Berlin’s cabaret scene and helped turn his home­town into the world’s queer cap­i­tal. But he also enraged the Nazis, who ran­sacked his Insti­tute for Sex­u­al Sci­ence and burned his books

Dri­ven from his home­land, Hirschfeld trav­eled to Amer­i­ca, Asia, and the Mid­dle East to research sex­u­al­i­ty on a glob­al scale. Through his har­row­ing lived expe­ri­ence of anti­se­mit­ic per­se­cu­tion and a piv­otal late-in-life inter­ra­cial romance, he came to see that race, like gen­der, was a human inven­tion. Hirschfeld spent his final years in exile try­ing to warn the world of the geno­ci­dal dan­gers of racism.

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