Antony R. H. Copley (1 July 1937 – 18 July 2016) was a British historian. He was an honorary professor at the
University of Kent at Canterbury, and specialised in nineteenth century French history and modern Indian history.
In 1959 Copley was found by the police in a public lavatory and arrested for importuning with immoral purposes. On the advice of his solicitor father, he pleaded guilty.[1] At the time of his death he was looking forward to a general pardon for men who like himself had been convicted of homosexual acts.[1][3]
Publications
Sexual Moralities in France, 1780-1980: New Ideas on the Family, Divorce, and Homosexuality: An Essay on Moral Change, Routledge (1989)
Gandhi: Against the Tide, Oxford University Press (1996)
Religions in Conflict: Ideology, Cultural Contact and Conversion in Late-Colonial India, Oxford India Paperbacks, 2000
Gandhi, Freedom, and Self-Rule (Global Encounters: Studies in Comparative Political Theory) by Anthony J. Parel, Judith M. Brown, Antony Copley and
Fred Dallmayr (2000)
Gurus and their followers: New religious reform movements in Colonial India, Oxford University Press,
ISBN978-0195649581 (2000)
A Spiritual Bloomsbury: Hinduism and Homosexuality in the Lives and Writings of Edward Carpenter, E.M. Forster, and Christopher Isherwood, Lexington, (2006)
Hinduism in Public and Private Reform, Hindutva, Gender, and Sampraday, Oxford India Paperbacks, 2009
Music and the Spiritual: Composers and Politics in the 20th Century, Ziggurat, (2012)
A Memoir: Historian and Homosexual: Search for a Postwar Identity: Edited Diaries and Journals, Fastprint publishing, (2016)