Introducing the New Sexuality Studies
Lýsing:
Introducing the New Sexuality Studies: Original Essays is an innovative, reader-friendly collection of essays that introduces the field of sexuality studies to undergraduate students. Examining the social, cultural, and historical dimensions of sexuality, this collection is designed to serve as a comprehensive yet accessible textbook for sexuality courses at the undergraduate level. The fourth edition adds 51 new essays whilst retaining 33 of the most popular essays from previous editions.
It features perspectives that are intersectional, transnational, sex positive, and attentive to historically marginalized groups along multiple axes of inequality, including gender, race, class, ability, body size, religious identity, age, and, of course, sexuality. Essays explore how a wide variety of social institutions, including medicine, religion, the state, and education, shape sexual desires, behaviors, and identities.
Sources of, and empirical research on, oppression are discussed, along with modes of resistance, activism, and policy change. The fourth edition also adds new user-friendly features for students and instructors. Keywords are italicized and defined, and each chapter concludes with review questions to help students ascertain their comprehension of key points. There is also an online annotated table of contents to help readers identify key ideas and concepts at a glance for each chapter.
Annað
- Höfundur: Nancy L. Fischer
- Útgáfa:4
- Útgáfudagur: 2022-06-07
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- Format:ePub
- ISBN 13: 9781000579185
- Print ISBN: 9780367756406
- ISBN 10: 1000579182
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- PART 1 Laying the foundations
- 1 Welcome to the new sexuality studies
- 2 Construction as a social process
- 3 The shifting lines of sexual morality
- 4 Trans categories and the sex/gender/sexuality system: how transforming understandings of sex and gender can shift sexuality
- 5 Unthinking compulsory sexuality: introducing asexuality
- 6 The dos and don’ts of dating: heterosexual and LGBTQ dating rituals as sexual scripts
- 7 Why sexual identities, behaviors, and attractions do not always “match”
- 8 Method matters: discovering how early motherhood, monogamy, and social class shape young women’s sexuality
- 9 Suicide is only part of the story: telling wounded truths about LGBTQ youth
- 10 Sex positivity: a Black feminist gift
- PART 2 Bodies and behaviors
- 11 The social meanings of sexual intercourse
- 12 Polishing the pearl: discoveries of the clitoris
- 13 But can you ever win? Genital cosmetic procedures
- 14 The social meanings and practices of orgasm
- 15 Anal sex: phallic and other meanings
- 16 Rethinking dick pics
- 17 Reconceiving unintended pregnancy: considering context in sexual and reproductive decision making
- 18 Sex in later life: beyond dysfunction and the coital imperative
- 19 “There’s really no reason to settle”: size acceptance as a path to sexual empowerment
- PART 3 Relating and relationships
- 20 Romance and other threats to our future
- 21 One is not born a bride: weddings and the heterosexual imaginary
- 22 Yes, no, maybe so? Inequalities in sexual consent and sexual pleasure for young adults
- 23 What do vulnerability, shame, and mindfulness have to do with intimacy?
- 24 Interracial romance: the logic of acceptance and domination
- 25 Romantic apartheid: digital sexual racism in online dating
- 26 Sexualized othering in multiracial women’s experiences with sex and romance
- 27 Gay racism: the institutional and interactional patterns of racism in gay communities
- 28 Gender labor, racework, and trans pleasure: transgender individuals’ experiences in intimate relationships
- 29 “We were on a BREAK!”: men chasing masculinity and women seeking pleasure in affairs
- 30 Polyamory, mononormativity, and polyqueer kinship
- PART 4 Sex, gender, and sexuality
- 31 Intersexy, but fat: on the selective celebration of bodily differences
- 32 Trans sexualities: identities, relationships, and desires
- 33 Adolescent girls’ sexuality: sexual agency and the renovated sexual double standard
- 34 “There is no such thing as a slut”: creating and destroying the “good girl” in Taylor Swift’s musical persona
- 35 “Guys are just homophobic”: rethinking adolescent homophobia and heterosexuality
- 36 Not “straight,” but still a “man”: negotiating nonheterosexual masculinities
- 37 Straight men and women: hegemonic and counter-hegemonic straightness
- 38 How “regular sex” contributes to the gender gap in orgasms
- 39 Sacred and beastly sex: abstinence pledges and masculinity
- 40 Heteroflexibility
- PART 5 Social structures and institutions
- 41 The economy and American marriage: change and continuity
- 42 The marriage contract: the legal context of marriage
- 43 The elusive goal of sexual health
- 44 Medicine and the making of a sexual body
- 45 The feminization of “responsive” desire
- 46 The coloniality of sexuality
- 47 “I am God’s creation”: religion as a positive force in the lives of LGBTQ+ persons of faith
- 48 The politics of sexuality and gender expression in schools
- 49 Sex education and its failures: from social inequalities to intimate possibilities
- PART 6 Navigating inequalities and oppressions
- 50 The body, disability, and sexuality
- 51 The intersection of sexuality and intellectual disabilities: shattering the taboo
- 52 Disrupting dichotomies: nonbinary sexual identities
- 53 Creando una familia: LBQ Latinas facilitating bonds through shared race/ethnicity
- 54 “Heterosexual families do not have to explain themselves”: heteronormativity in the lives of LGBTQ+ children and parents
- 55 Intersected lives: race, class, and gender in lesbian- and gay-affirming Protestant congregations
- 56 “The thorn in my side”: how ex-gays, ex-ex-gays, and celibate gays negotiate their religious and sexual identities
- 57 The racial and sexual stereotypes of the “down low”
- 58 Unspoiling identity: combating racial and sexual stigma
- PART 7 Sexual cultures, places, and scenes
- 59 Sexual capital and social inequality: the study of sexual fields
- 60 Belonging in gay neighborhoods and queer nightlife
- 61 Queering the sexual and racial politics of urban revitalization
- 62 “We will always remember”: reactivating queer places as expressions of grief, solidarity, and protest after Pulse
- 63 The changing role of gay bars in American LGBTQ+ life
- 64 Learning to be queer: college women’s sexual fluidity
- 65 Critical consent: negotiating consent in trans-les-bi-queer BDSM communities
- 66 Nurturing through normalizing, endangering through dramatizing: approaches to adolescent sex and love
- PART 8 Sexual labor and commerce
- 67 The sexual economy and Nevada’s legal brothels
- 68 Inclusive pleasure: feminist sex shops
- 69 Looks for sale: the impact of aesthetic labor on the self-concepts of men who strip
- 70 Intimate labor in the adult film industry
- 71 Migrant sex work and trafficking: sorting them out
- 72 Sex work, the victim, and the anti-trafficking movement
- 73 Sex workers’ rights activism in the United States: navigating the internet in an age of s*x work censorship, state, and corporate surveillance
- 74 Challenging the controlling images of vamps and victims: sex worker activism in India
- PART 9 Sexual politics, social movements, and empowerment
- 75 Sexuality, state, and nation
- 76 Anti-homosexuality legislation and religion viewed from a transnational frame
- 77 The Religious Right, same-sex marriage, and LGBTQ+ rights activism
- 78 The evolution of same-sex marriage politics in the United States
- 79 The politics of race, class, and gender in queer safer sex
- 80 Children’s sexual citizenship
- 81 War and the politics of sexual violence
- 82 The history of activism against sexual violence and the modern #MeToo movement
- 83 A public health approach to campus sexual assault prevention: sexual citizenship, sexual projects, and sexual geographies
- 84 The ally paradox
- Index
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- Gerð : 208
- Höfundur : 18657
- Útgáfuár : 2022
- Leyfi : 380