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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Norman_HaireNorman Haire - Wikipedia

    Norman Haire, born Norman Zions (21 January 1892, Sydney – 11 September 1952, London) was an Australian medical practitioner and sexologist. He has been called "the most prominent sexologist in Britain" between the wars.

  2. 13 de abr. de 2017 · Norman Haire was a physician who advocated for eugenics, which is the betterment of human population by promoting positive traits, and birth control rights in the twentieth century in both Australia and the UK.

  3. Norman Haire, nacido Norman Zions (21 de enero de 1892, Sydney - 11 de septiembre de 1952, Londres) fue un médico y sexólogo australiano. Se le ha llamado "el sexólogo más destacado de Gran Bretaña" entre guerras. [1] Cuando Norman nació en 1892, sus padres, Henry y Clara Zions, vivían en Sydney en….

  4. The Encyclopaedia of Sexual Knowledge, under the editorship of Dr. Norman Haire (1892–1952), is the first of a trilogy of sexual encyclopaedias by Arthur Koestler writing under the pen name of ‘Dr. A. Costler’. It is the English version, published by Koestler's cousin Francis Aldor in 1934, of the book L'encyclopédie de la vie ...

  5. 1 de ene. de 1996 · by Frank M. C. Forster. Norman Haire (1892-1952), medical practitioner and sexologist, was born on 21 January 1892 at Paddington, Sydney, eleventh and last child of Henry Zions, gentleman, and his London-born wife Clara, née Cohen. Henry was a Jewish emigrant from Poland who had changed his surname from Zajac.

  6. 8 de sept. de 2017 · Historians have generally identified the Australian sexologist Norman Haire – a well-known, eccentric figure within London’s elite medical community – as responsible for importing the ring into Britain.

  7. Norman Haire and the Study of Sex. By Diana. Sydney University Press, 2012. Pp. 485. $35.00 (paper). Norman Haire, mid-twentieth-century medical practitioner, birth control advocate, offers a biographer (and reader) to read some of the major sex reform movements of twentieth century from an angle just off center: not nor quite in the middle.