GABRIELE NEHER draws attention to an astoundingly skilled Flemish painter who defied the notion that women cannot paint like men
Racism and the Making of Gay Rights
by Laurie Marhoeffer
University of Toronto Press ££22.38
THERE is so much wrong with Laurie Marhoeffer’s attempt to give an account of the life of Magnus Hirschfeld, and his relationship with the Chinese medical student Li Shiu Tong, that you shouldn't mistake it for history. Rather it is a case-study in why LGBTQI studies gets a bad name. It is spurious, sensationalist and blind to the epoch it purports to describe.
Hirschfeld was a German physician who was so appalled by the stigma attached to homosexuality and the shocking number of suicides that it caused that he became an outspoken advocate for the human rights of what he came to call “sexual minorities.”
He invented the scientific study of sexuality, founded the first gay rights movement – the Scientific Humanitarian Committee – in 1897, and in 1919 created the Institute for the Science of Sexuality in Berlin that became a Mecca for gay men throughout Europe.
1943-2025: How one man’s unfinished work reveals the lethal lie of ‘colour-blind’ medicine
ANGUS REID squirms at the spectacle of a bitter millennial on work experience in a gay sauna
ANGUS REID is bowled over by a cinematic masterpiece that examines the labour of nursing in forensic, dramatic detail
JOHN GREEN observes how Berlin’s transformation from socialist aspiration to imperial nostalgia mirrors Germany’s dangerous trajectory under Chancellor Merz — a BlackRock millionaire and anti-communist preparing for a new war with Russia



