496 Pages
by
Routledge
In the 1980s and early 1990s the scholarly analysis of the Harlem Renaissance became more sophisticated, reflecting increasing interest in the field of African American studies. This volume collects writings that reflect the major changes in the scholarship and the increased emphasis on the role of women in the movement, as well as the application of the methodologies and insights of race and... Read more
Chigo Monogatari; Love Stories or Buddhist Sermons?, Le Vice in Turkey, Homosexuality and Transvestism in the Philippines: The Cebuan Filipino Bayot and Lakin-on, The Korean Namsadang, Transvestitism and the Religious Hermaphrodite in Indonesia, Lesbianism in the Chinese of Hong Kong, Homosexual Offences in Ch'ing Law, The Hijras of India: A Preliminary Report, The Covert Subculture of Male Homosexual Prostitutes in Metro-Manila, Ar-Razi on the Hidden Illness, Male Homosexuality in Contemporaiy Mainland China, The Hower Boys of Silla (Hwarang): Notes on the Sources, Hafiz and His Critics, Men, Women, and Boys: Love and Sex in the Works of Sa'di, Social Profile of Homosexuals in an Indian Male Prison, Man Becomes Woman: Transsexualism in Oman as a Key to Gender Roles, Acknowledgments, Index
Biography
Cary D. Wintz is Professor of History at Texas Southern University in Houston. He received his undergraduate education at Rice University and his Ph.D. from Kansas State University. He is the author of many books, articles, and book reviews, mostly in the field of African American history or immigrant/ethnic history, and he has lectured internationally on these topics as a USIA lecturer in both the Philippines and India.






