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Claude-François Michéa (14 March 1815 – 18 July 1882) was a French psychiatrist and the secretary of the Medico-Psychological Society in France.[1] He is credited as "one of the first to modernise the theory of
perversions",[2] as well as with publishing the "earliest paper that mentioned
homosexuality in a psychiatric context".[3] Michéa described homosexuality as "the presence of female organs in male bodies".[4] He was also called to testify at the trial of
François Bertrand, where he argued that Bertrand's
necrophilia was "the most extreme and most rare of the deviations of the sexual appetite".[5] He died in
Dijon.[6]
^Longman, Chia (2002). "Dynamics of sex, gender and culture: The Native American berdache or 'two-spirit people' in discourse and context". In Barbara Saunders; Marie-Claire Foblets (eds.). Changing Genders in Intercultural Perspectives. Leuven University Press. p. 126.
ISBN9789058672018.
^Downing, Lisa (2011). "Eros and Thanatos in European and American Sexology". In Kate Fisher; Sarah Toulalan (eds.). Bodies, Sex and Desire from the Renaissance to the Present. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 206.
ISBN9780230283688.
^Laehr, Heinrich (2018). Gedenktage der Psychiatrie und ihrer Hülfsdisciplinen in allen Ländern (in German). De Gruyter. p. 217.
ISBN9783111673264.