Kilic, GözdeGözdeKilic2022-09-122020-09-022022-09-1220202366-4142http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:hebis:26-opus-154419https://jlupub.ub.uni-giessen.de/handle/jlupub/7683http://dx.doi.org/10.22029/jlupub-7117Izeddin Sadan, considered to be among the pioneers of psychoanalysis in Turkey, published a series of essays in 1936 titled Eros (Ask) Ile Mücadele [ Strife with Eros (Love) ] in the popular magazine Yeni Adam. He hailed these essays as a landmark in the scientific endeavor to objectively lay out the true nature of love. In them, he described love as a volatile microbe constituting sickness with its origins in Christianity; however, by inverted logic, he projected the same sickness onto Islam, in particular Sufism, which he disparaged as homosexual debauchery. This article looks at how Sadan´s pathologizing of Sufi love of beardless boys as sexual perversion is itself a symptom of pathology, pointing towards a fundamental change in the gen-dered/modernized/Orientalized subject´s relationship with the other and itself.enNamensnennung 4.0 InternationalIzeddin SadanTurkeypsychoanalysislovesicknessSufismhomosexualitynationalismddc:300Turkey´s Pioneering Psychoanalyst: Izeddin Sadan´s Disquisition on (Homosexual) Love as Sickness