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American Literary History 2005 17(4):753-764; doi:10.1093/alh/aji044
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© The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oupjournals.org

Middlesex: What Men Like in Men

Leland S. Person

Professor and Head of the English Department at the University of Cincinnati

The typical man is curiously deficient in a capacity for self-analysis. He seldom devotes any serious thought to the origin of his opinions, the determining factor in his judgments, the ultimate source of his desires, or the hidden mainspring of his motives.

Rafford Pyke, "What Men Like in Men," Cosmopolitan (1902)

There were male customers, married heterosexual men, who sometimes dreamed of making love to women who possessed penises, not male penises, but thin, tapering feminized stalks, like the stamens of flowers, clitorises that had elongated tremendously from abundant desire. There were gay customers who dreamed of boys who were almost female, smooth-skinned, hairless. There were lesbian customers who dreamed of women with penises, not male penises but womanly erections, possessing a sensitivity and aliveness no dildo ever had. There is no way to tell what percentage of the population dreams such dreams of sexual transmogrification.

Jeffrey Eugenides, Middlesex: A Novel (2002)


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