Alfred C. Kinsey was perhaps the most controversial figure in the
US during the 1950s. His books on sexual behavior in the human male
and female made best-seller lists and were translated into thirteen
languages. Kinsey was denounced by journalists, clergymen, members
of Congress, educators, and even housewives, yet upon his death,
the New York Times called him In Kinsey: A Biography, Cornelia V.
Christenson, an assistant to Dr. Kinsey, discloses the man behind
the myth. She reveals how this dedicated family man and lover of
the great outdoors began his journey as a scientist and ended up
studying sexuality. And as Christenson points out, perhaps Kinsey's
greatest accomplishment during his long struggle for academic
freedom was protecting the freedom of the scientist to explore and
analyze any field of inquiry.
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