1. Ernest E. Hadley, ‘Comments on Pedophilia’, Medical Journal and Record, 124 (1926), 157–62. John Cassity, in a paper read before the Washington Psychopathological Society on 28 June 1926, states that ‘it has been only in the past decade that these [sex] offenders have been suspected as victims of psycho-pathological processes by the courts or by the people at large except those which were very obviously deranged individuals’ (‘Psychological Considerations of Pedophilia’, Psychoanalytic Review, 14 [1927], 189–99).
2. 2. John Money, 'Paraphilias: Phyletic Origins of Erotosexual Dysfunction', International Journal of Mental Health, 10 (1981), 75-109 (97-8)
3. 3. 'Paraphilias: Phenomenology and Classification', American Journal of Psychotherapy, 38 (1984), 164-79
4. 4. Lovemaps (New York: Irvington, 1986), 69-72, 216.
5. Post-publication letters to Wilhelm Fliess dated 6 December 1896 and 21 September 1897 as well as Freud’s ‘Selbstdarstellung’ (in L.R. Grote (ed.), Die Medizin der Gegenwart in Selbstdarstellungen, Leipzig: Meiner, 1925, Vol. IV, 1–52) contradict this, stating that women’s seducers were (nearly) all fathers. Another letter dated 28 April 1897 also reports a father and grandfather as seducers. Cf. Triplett, op. cit. (note 115), 663–4.