Bret Hinsch

Bret Hinsch was born in 1963 in Dallas, Texas. He was an Associate Professor of History at National Chung Cheng University and lived for over two decades, since 1992, in Taipei, Taiwan.

He studied at Yale, Harvard and Nanjing University and holds PhDs in history and East Asian languages from Harvard University, in psychology with significant post-doctorate involvement in human sexuality issues, in fields other than psychology, and MAs with significant post-graduate involvement in human sexuality issues.

In an interview with Fridae in 2002, Hinsch revealed that he initially wanted to be a biologist but gave up that dream after finding that it required a lot of mathematics. He ended up studying Chinese history because he happened to take an interesting class on Chinese philosophy during his freshman year in college. He loved it so much that he started studying Chinese. It was a total coincidence that he happened to take a class that changed his life. Sometimes we make the most important decisions in life for the most trivial reasons.

Hinsch came out to his family when he was 18 years old. Coming out was tense - his parents were conservative Texan republicans and were shocked at first. But they quickly got used to the idea. Things improved and they got along very well with his lover. He gets the impression that his mother enjoys talking more to his Taiwanese partner Allen than to himself whenever she telephones them. In 2002, he had been together with Allen for 16 years and lived with him.

His only encounter with homophobia was when he was a graduate student living in Boston and someone threw a rock through my bedroom window. The day before, one of his neighbors had seen him embracing his lover as their windows faced each other across an alley. The neighbour did not look too pleased to see two men hugging and Hinsch suspects that it was this neighbour who threw the rock. He considers himself lucky that it was the only overt prejudice he had ever experienced.

When he was in college, his role model, Professor John Boswell, was gay and proud. His example had a profound influence on Hinsch. Boswell was a superb teacher - smart, witty, dedicated, and a very warm human being. It showed him that an openly gay man could succeed in the academic world and change his students' lives.

=Publications=


 * "The Origins of Separation of the Sexes in China," The Journal of the American Oriental Society, 2003.
 * "Women in Early Imperial China", 2002.
 * "Passions of the Cut Sleeve, The Male Homosexual Tradition in China", 1990.

=See also=


 * Passions of the Cut Sleeve

=References=


 * Sylvia Tan, "Bret Hinsch", Fridae, 30 April 2002.
 * Bret Hinsch's bibliography on Fridae.
 * Bret Hinsch's Facebook page:.

=Acknowledgements=

This article was written by Roy Tan.