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A man whose love was criminalised,” Sweet writes. But John Spencer is present – offered to the reader as a victim of the Victorian state. “The names of these boys do not feature in Outrages: Sex, Censorship, and the Criminalisation of Love. Sweet’s article says that Spencer was a school headmaster who was accused of sexually assaulting a group of schoolchildren and found guilty on one count, according to contemporaneous newspaper reports and Old Bailey records from 1860. In a blistering article in the Telegraph (£), Sweet pointed to Wolf’s depiction of John Spencer, a man who she describes as “tried three times, accused of sex with three different men”. Now Sweet and historian Dr Fern Riddell have responded to the corrected paperback edition, accusing Wolf of citing cases of men found guilty of sexually assaulting children and animals as examples of a wider persecution of gay men in consensual relationships.
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The book was subsequently pulled and pulped in the US, and corrected in the UK by Wolf’s publisher, Virago. However, the term reflects a crime punishable by death that was commuted to a custodial sentence, a common occurrence. Wolf had believed it signified an execution, and claimed that she had found “several dozen executions” of gay men after the last recorded execution for sodomy in 1835. Sweet pointed out that she had misunderstood the term “death recorded” in historical records. The book first ran into trouble when it was published as a hardback in 2019, when Wolf, the author of The Beauty Myth, was confronted during a BBC radio broadcast by the historian Dr Matthew Sweet. Outrages recounts the life of writer John Addington Symonds and how gay men in the 19th century would have feared lengthy prison sentences and hard labour for “unnatural offences”.