Ellen Karolina Sofia Key Mamah Bouton Borhwic Havelock Ellis
Swedish-born Key incidentally coined the term, "The Century of the Child" in her most revered work 'Barnets Arhundrae', and proved to be an important - and influential - international figure in the women's rights and suffrage movements during the late 1800's and early 1900's. Beyond this, she also was a significant proponent of social welfare systems for children and mothers. She is known for being a pivotal figure in the Modern Breakthrough movement, and was a pioneer in the child-centric approach to the parental and educational environs. Her fulcrum ideas shaped - and continue to shape -...
Swedish-born Key incidentally coined the term, "The Century of the Child" in her most revered work 'Barnets Arhundrae', and proved to be an important ...
Complete digitally restored reprint (facsimile handmade reproduction) of the original edition of 1914 with excellent resolution and outstanding readability. The layout is +60% larger as the original for a better readability. With a digital original autograph by Havelock Ellis.
Complete digitally restored reprint (facsimile handmade reproduction) of the original edition of 1914 with excellent resolution and outstanding readab...
This is a new edition of "Sexual Inversion," originally published in 1915 by F. A. Davis Company, Publishers, of Philadelphia. Part of the project Immortal Literature Series of classic literature, this is a new edition of the classic work published in 1915-not a facsimile reprint. Obvious typographical errors have been carefully corrected and the entire text has been reset and redesigned by Pen House Editions to enhance readability, while respecting the original edition. "Sexual Inversion" was the first English medical textbook on the topic of homosexuality. The book became a part of Ellis's...
This is a new edition of "Sexual Inversion," originally published in 1915 by F. A. Davis Company, Publishers, of Philadelphia. Part of the project Imm...
The son of a British ship's captain, Havelock Ellis spent much of his childhood in the Pacific. He became a teacher in New South Wales, then studied medicine in London, eventually devoting himself to research and writing in England. Ellis's works fall under many heads: science, art, travel, poetry, and essays. He has achieved distinction in many different fields. His most important work was Studies in the Psychology of Sex (1898), which, when first published in England, was the subject of legal battles as to its "obscenity." However, the book helped to change public attitudes toward sex and...
The son of a British ship's captain, Havelock Ellis spent much of his childhood in the Pacific. He became a teacher in New South Wales, then studied m...