Die Transvestiten: Eine Untersuchung über den Erotischen Verkleidungstrieb is a classic 1910 book on crossdressing and transvestism that was written by German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld.[1][2][3] An illustrated companion second volume to the book was published by Hirschfeld and Max Tilke in 1912.[4][5][6] In addition, a second edition of Die Transvestiten was published by Hirschfeld in 1925.[7] Subsequent to its publication, the book was translated into English with the title Transvestites: The Erotic Drive to Cross-Dress by Michael Lombardi-Nash in 1991.[8][3]
Hirschfeld was himself gay and an occasional crossdresser, known by other Berlin crossdressers as "Aunt Magnesia".[9][8] It has been said that Die Transvestiten was the most significant and authoritative text on transvestism of its time.[10] While the book is about crossdressing, it also clearly includes some people with cross-gender feelings who would likely be referred to as transgender today.[1][9][8] The book has often been overlooked in the English-speaking academia.[10]
Die Transvestiten includes first-person narratives of crossdressing, Hirschfeld's commentaries on these cases, and theorizing based on the observations.[1] Of the narratives, there were 17 in total, with 16 of them natal male and one of them natal female.[1] In the book, Hirschfeld wished to distinguish transvestism and transgenderism from other forms of sexual and/or gender variance, like homosexuality and paraphilias like fetishism and sadomasochism.[1][8] Hirschfeld coined the term transvestism in the book.[1] The original data for the cases in the book was destroyed by the Nazis in 1933 when they burned down Hirschfeld's Institut für Sexualwissenschaft (Institute for Sexual Science) in Berlin.[1]
The third mode was more anthropological; a prime example are the many photographs in the 1912 illustrated companion volume to Hirschfeld's 1910 study Die Transvestiten: Eine Untersuchung u¨ber den erotischen Verkleidungstrieb. [...] Hirschfeld, Magnus, and Max Tilke. Der erotische Verkleidungstrieb (Die Transvestiten): Illustrierter Teil. Berlin: Alfred Pulvermacher, 1912
This is visualized in the accompanying illustrated volume [to Hirschfeld's Die Transvestiten], published in 1912, where images focus almost exclusively on clothes as costumes.90 [...] On the one hand, this confirms Hirschfeld's desire to discover the "laws on nature," which was also the title of his monograph Naturgesetze der Liebe, published the same year that the second volume of Die Transvestiten was published, in 1912.
Magnus Hirschfeld (1868-1935) was one of the more influential pioneers in the study of human sexuality. Looking back, he can be seen as part of a triumvirate of path breaking physician sexologists in the early twentieth century, the other two being Havelock Ellis (1859-1939) and Sigmund Freud (1856-1939). For most of the last half of the twentieth century, however, Hirschfeld was more or less ignored in the English speaking world, despite the fact that two of his works, Die Transvestiten (1910) and Die Homosexualitgit des Mannes und des Weibes (1914), were the most significant and authoritative works written on the subjects before Kinsey and his data and are still of importance to the current generation of researchers. It has only been within the past fifteen years that these two works have finally been translated into English and are must reads for anyone doing research into almost any area of sex and gender.