Friedrich Jacobsohn Explained

Friedrich Jacobsohn (born 1894) was a German urologist and writer on sex. Jacobsohn's book Geschlechtsleben und sexuelle Hygiene (1932) was written with Abraham Buschke, a dermatologist and expert on venereal disease. Illustrated with some colour plates, it was translated into English, where it went through several editions. Given the different sexual needs of men and women, men were not encouraged to over-extend intercourse after orgasm: they should "enjoy sexual intercourse in normal fashion, without extensive preliminaries, without any attempt at artificial prolongation, but proceeding as quickly as may be to orgasm and ejaculation."[1]

Works

Notes and References

  1. Sex Habits, p.148. Quoted in Hera Cook, The Long Sexual Revolution: English women, sex, and contraception 1800-1975, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004, p.204