In this groundbreaking and eminently readable study, Alison Moore addresses the ways in which certain nonnormative sexual modalities...have been used to shore up a dominant mythic narrative of historical progress.... [T]his is an assured and convincing work of genuine intellectual depth that significantly contributes to our understanding both of the history of sexuality and of how sexuality is used to make history. It will be of great interest to those working in political theory and the history of ideas, as well as those in the broad interdisciplinary field of gender and sexuality studies in general and the subfield of the history of sexuality in particular. It deserves, in sum, to be widely read, much discussed, and recommended to students at all levels.