Ah Wickerman - disagreement!
Victorian society didn't hide or shrink away from 'normal' relationships between men and women.
Macnaghten described Druitt as sexually insane.
The only logical conclusion that can be drawn from this - supported by his sacking from the Boys School and subsequent suicide, supported by his failure (like Oscar Wilde about a year before) to gain election to the Oxford Union, and supported by his affected photographic portraits - is that the form of sexual insanity Macnaghten referred to was homosexuality.
That was the most prevalent form of sexual insanity as then thought.
Victorians thought that homosexuals were also woman haters, and by extension capable of any dastardly deed.
It can't be proved but it is the most logical conclusion.
Victorian society didn't hide or shrink away from 'normal' relationships between men and women.
Macnaghten described Druitt as sexually insane.
The only logical conclusion that can be drawn from this - supported by his sacking from the Boys School and subsequent suicide, supported by his failure (like Oscar Wilde about a year before) to gain election to the Oxford Union, and supported by his affected photographic portraits - is that the form of sexual insanity Macnaghten referred to was homosexuality.
That was the most prevalent form of sexual insanity as then thought.
Victorians thought that homosexuals were also woman haters, and by extension capable of any dastardly deed.
It can't be proved but it is the most logical conclusion.
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