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Sexual Heresies
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12 May 2026

In Britain at the end of the nineteenth century, the new sexual sciences
"Dixon's study offers a treasure trove of insights into the complex relationship between science and religion in modern debates about sex. This rich and nuanced history is a must read for anyone interested in how sexuality took shape in Britain." —Heike Bauer, Birkbeck, University of London
"Joy Dixon's Sexual Heresies is a tour de force in its sophisticated charting of the complicated and contradictory reverberations between the sexual and the spiritual in early twentieth century Britain. Its cast of intriguing actors - sex reformers, liberalising clergymen, mystic theosophists, esoteric experimenters, and secular radicals – illustrate the intimate dialogue between faith and desire when harnessed to modernising impulses in sexology, psychology, and theology. In creatively braiding together often siloed histories of gender, sexuality, and religion, Dixon illuminates the diverse intellectual and experiential resources deployed by men and women before the Second World War in fashioning the modern, gendered, sexual, and increasingly secularising self. Sexual Heresies will reset the terms of the debate about the relationship between modern sex and heterodox religion for future scholars." —Alana Harris, King's College London
Introduction
1. Religion and the New Science of Sex
2. Psychology, Sexuality, and Liberal Modernism
3. Gender, Sex, and the Body in Modern Esotericism
4. Sin, Salvation, and Sexuality
5. Secularism, Anticlericalism, and Sexuality
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index