Alexander Comfort (10 February 1920 – 26 March
2000) was a medical professional,
gerontologist,
anarchist,
pacifist,
conscientious objector and
writer, best known for
The Joy of
Sex, which played a part in what is often called the
sexual
revolution. He was also the author of many other books on a
variety of topics.
Education
Comfort
was educated at Highgate
School
and Trinity College, Cambridge
. He studied medicine at the University of
Cambridge
(pre-clinical study leading to a BA, upgraded in
1944 to an MA) and the London Hospital (now known as the Royal London
Hospital
), qualifying in 1944 with both the Conjoint diplomas of LRCP
London, MRCS England and
the Cambridge MB BChir
degrees.
Life and work
Comfort
served as a House Physician at the London Hospital
and went on to become a lecturer in physiology at
the London Hospital Medical College. In 1945 he obtained the
Conjoint Board's Diploma in Child Health, and progressed to a PhD
in 1950 and a DSc of the
University
of London in 1963.
A leading pacifist, Comfort considered himself "an aggressive
anti-militarist", and he believed that pacifism rested "solely upon
the historical theory of anarchism". He was an active member of
CND.
Among the works on anarchism by Comfort is
Peace and
Disobedience (1946), one of many pamphlets he wrote for
Peace News and the
Peace Pledge Union, and
Authority and
Delinquency in the Modern State (1950). He exchanged public
correspondence with
George Orwell
defending pacifism in the open letter/poem "Letter to an American
Visitor" under the pseudonym "Obadiah Hornbrooke."
He had a successful academic career in both England and the United
States of America, in parallel with his social and political
activism, and was a prolific writer.
Comfort's hastily-written 1972 book
The Joy of Sex earned
him worldwide fame and $3 million. But he was bitter to become
known as "Dr. Sex" and to have his other work given so little
relative attention.
Comfort devoted much of the 1950s and 1960s studying the biology of
aging (
biogerontology) as
well as popularizing the subject. He could be called an early
biomedical gerontologist (
life
extensionist) on the basis of his view that science could
extend human lifespan. In 1969 he suggested that
life expectancy (not simply
maximum life span) could be extended to
120 within 20 years. Although Comfort believed that aging could be
postponed, he did not believe that it could be eliminated, and he
did not write about
rejuvenation.
In old age he returned to England, and in his last years was
disabled after a stroke.
He died aged 80 on 26 March 2000 in South
Northamptonshire
.
Partial bibliography
- No Such Liberty (1941) - novel
- Three New Poets (1942) - Alex Comfort, Roy McFadden, Ian
Serraillier
- A Wreath for the Living (1942)
- Elegies (1944)
- The Power House (1944) - novel
- The Song of Lazarus (1945)
- Outlaw of the Lowest Planet by Kenneth Patchen (1946) - Preface by Alex
Comfort
- Art and Social Responsibility (1946)
- The Signal to Engage (1946)
- Peace and Disobedience (1946) - pamphlet (reprinted in
1994 in Against Power and Death)
- Barbarism and Sexual Freedom (1948) - non-fiction
- On This Side Nothing (1949) - novel,influenced by
Albert Camus, whose work Comfort
admired
- Authority And Delinquency in the Modern State
(1950)
- Sexual Behaviour in Society (1950) - non-fiction
- And All But He Departed (1951)
- A Giant's Strength (1952) - novel
- The Biology of Senescence
(1956) - non-fiction
- Come out to Play (1961) - novel
- Haste to the Wedding (1962)
- Darwin and the Naked Lady (1962) - articles
- Sex in Society (1963) - non-fiction
- Ageing - the Biology of Senescence (1964)
- Koka Shastra (1964)
- Process of Ageing (1965)
- The Joy of Sex: A Gourmet
Guide to Lovemaking (1972)
- Come out to Play (1975)
- I and That: Notes on the Biology of Religion
(1979)
- Poems for Jane (1979)
- Tetrarch (1981)-a fantasy novel inspired by William Blake
- Reality And Empathy: Physics, Mind, and Science in the 21st
Century (1984)
- Imperial Patient(1987) -a historical novel about
Nero.
- The Philosophers(1989) -satire of Thatcher's Government set in the
future.
- Writings Against Power and Death (1994)
References
- For discussions of Comfort's political views, see Demanding
the Impossible: A History of Anarchism (1992) by Peter
Marshall, and Anarchist Seeds Beneath the Snow (2006)
by David
Goodway.
- Complete Essays, Journalism and Letters of George
Orwell volume II, pg. 294-303
- Deaths England and Wales 1984-2006
- Encyclopedia of Science Fiction,by John Clute and Peter
Nicholls,(1993). pg. 287.
External links