This website has a .gov link

The .gov means it’s official.

Louisiana government websites often end in .gov. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a Louisiana government site.

HTTPS Connection

The site is secure.

The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

Daniel Brook is a journalist and author whose writing has appeared in Harper’s, the New York Times Magazine, and The Nation. Research for his books, which include A History of Future Cities and The Accident of Color: A Story of Race in Reconstruction, has been supported by fellowships from the Library of Congress, Tulane University, and the Biographers International Organization (BIO). Born in Brooklyn, New York, and educated at Yale, Brook lives in New Orleans, Louisiana.


Schedule

Noon to 12:45 pm
Outside Museum, North Tent
The Einstein of Sex: Dr. Magnus Hirschfield, Visionary of Weimar Berlin
Daniel Brook with moderator Gary Richards

1:00 pm to 1:45 pm
Cavalier House Books Tent
Book Signing


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

An illuminating portrait of a lost thinker, German-Jewish sexologist and activist Magnus Hirschfeld.

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.

Rich in passion and intellect, The Einstein of Sex at last brings together this unsung icon’s work on sexuality, gender, and race and recovers the visionary who first saw beyond the binaries. A century after his groundbreaking work―as the fights for personal freedom and societal acceptance rage on―Hirschfeld’s gift for thinking beyond the confines of his world has much to teach us.