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Finding Out: An Introduction to LGBT Studies [Kietas viršelis]

3.71/5 (157 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 480 pages, aukštis x plotis: 254x178 mm, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Feb-2009
  • Leidėjas: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1412938643
  • ISBN-13: 9781412938648
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 480 pages, aukštis x plotis: 254x178 mm, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Feb-2009
  • Leidėjas: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1412938643
  • ISBN-13: 9781412938648
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Finding Out introduces readers to lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender (LGBT) studies. Unlike most books on LGBT, this textbook combines original material with esteemed journal articles. Chapter introductions, written by the authors, place current research findings in a clear context. Finding Out reviews the history of same-sex relationships and gender variance from ancient Greece to the present yet goes beyond a historical account to provide an in-depth examination of LGBT culture and society. It includes chapter introductions that gives students a useful context for each research article. It connects chapter topics to one another with Lambda Links, which help facilitate analysis and discussion. It directs readers to relevant studies and information with "Find Out More" boxes in each chapter. "I am most impressed by this book's blend of comprehensive scope with approachable, intelligent presentation. It provides material valuable for both students new to the field and those taking more advanced courses without excluding either group on the basis of approach or diction...I just love this book!" (Sarah-Hope Parmeter University of California, Santa Cruz). "This text will give me a way to teach LGBT issues as central - that is, Not as tangents, as add-ons, as side issues, but as a central area of inquiry...This text is by far the best thing I have seen, and it is heads and shoulders above any other possibilities..." (Mary Armstrong, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Intended Audience). This core text is designed for Introduction to Sexuality Studies as well as other undergraduate courses that include LGBT topics. Anyone interested in the history, culture, and society of LGBT will find this book an informative resource.

Daugiau informacijos

Winner of Eric Hoffer Book Award - Reference Category 2010.
Preface: To the Instructor xi
Introduction: To the Reader 1(10)
Section I: History
Before Identity: The Ancient World through the Nineteenth Century
11(32)
Greek Paiderastia
13(1)
Pederasty in Other Early Cultures: The Middle East and Far East
14(1)
Gender Variance in Pre-Columbian America and India
15(1)
Same-Sex Relationships and Desires in Judeo-Christian Cultures
16(2)
Desires for Identity
18(1)
Romantic Friendships and Boston Marriages
19(2)
Molly-Houses: Early Homoerotic Subculture in England
21(2)
Questions for Discussion
23(1)
References and Further Reading
23(20)
Readings:
``To a Maiden'' and ``Hymn to Aphrodite''
26(1)
Sappho
``In the Bath-house'' and ``My Lover Has Started to Shave''
27(1)
Abu Nuwas
from the Epic Poem Masnavi
28(2)
Zulali Khwansari
``Bamboo Clappers Strike the Hateful Number''
30(3)
Ihara Saikaku
``Song of Beau Wang''
33(1)
Wu Meicun
Ancient Egyptian Binding Spell
34(1)
Hymn to Saints Serge and Bacchus
35(4)
Order for Solemnization of Same-Sex Union
39(2)
Wadham Limericks
41(2)
Sexology: Constructing the Modern Homosexual
43(22)
Victorian Sex: Some Background
44(2)
Sexology: Defining a Field of Study
46(3)
A Sexologist in Depth: Havelock Ellis
49(3)
Paving the Way for Freud
52(1)
Sexology and Early Sexual Rights Movements
53(1)
Sexology's Legacy
54(1)
Questions for Discussion
55(1)
References and Further Reading
56(9)
Readings:
from Studies in the Psychology of Sex, ``History II'' and ``History XXXVI''
58(3)
Havelock Ellis
from ``Capitalism and Gay Identity''
61(4)
John D'Emilio
Toward Liberation
65(26)
Medical Models of Homosexuality
67(2)
Urban Life and Sexual Expression
69(1)
World War II and Homosexuality
70(3)
McCarthy and the Purge of the ``Perverts''
73(2)
The Homophile Movement
75(2)
Questions for Discussion
77(1)
References and Further Reading
77(14)
Readings:
``What Interest Does the Women's Movement Have in Solving the Homosexual Problem?''
79(6)
Anna Ruling
``Should Homosexuality Be Eliminated?''
85(6)
Donald Webster Cory
John P. LeRoy
Stonewall and Beyond
91(30)
Emerging Visibility and Activism
93(3)
AIDS Activism
96(3)
Antigay Backlash
99(2)
Gays in the Military and Hate Crimes Legislation
101(2)
Questions for Discussion
103(1)
References and Further Reading
104(17)
Readings:
``The Woman-Identified Woman''
106(4)
Radicalesbians
``The Combahee River Collective Statement''
110(11)
Section II: Politics
Nature, Nurture, and Identity
121(30)
Kinsey
121(2)
Kinsey Scale
123(1)
After Kinsey
124(2)
Klein's Sexual Orientation Grid
126(1)
The Storms Sexuality Axis
127(3)
The Quest for the Gay Gene
130(4)
Nature-Nurture: What's at Stake?
134(2)
Questions for Discussion
136(1)
References and Further Reading
136(15)
Readings:
``Differences in Finger Length Ratios between Self-Identified `Butch' and `Femme' Lesbians''
139(5)
Windy M. Brown
Christopher J. Finn
Bradley M. Cooke
S. Marc Breedlove
``Is Your Baby Gay? What If You Could Know? What If You Could Do Something about It?''
144(4)
Albert Mohler Jr.
from ``Essentialism''
148(3)
Rictor Norton
Inclusion and Equality
151(24)
Civil and Human Rights in a Global Context
152(1)
Inclusion versus Assimilation: Two Approaches to Securing Rights
153(2)
Exclusion, Inequality, and Physical Violence
155(3)
Exclusion and Inequality---Both ``Outside'' and ``Inside''
158(6)
Questions for Discussion
164(1)
References and Further Reading
164(11)
Readings:
Excerpts from the South African Constitution
167(1)
``Military Discharges of Gays Rise, and So Do Bias Incidents''
168(1)
Christopher Marquis
``Lesbian Judge Fights Chilean Court for Taking Her Children''
169(3)
Larry Rohter
``You've Got to Fight to Be Free''
172(1)
Reverend Willie Wilson
``Minister's Fiery Anti-gay Sermon Riles Activists''
172(3)
Katherine Volin
Lou Chibbaro Jr.
Queer Diversities
175(26)
L ... G ... T...: A Story of Push and Pull
177(3)
Bisexual Erasure in the LGBT Community
180(3)
Intersexuality
183(1)
Q: Beyond Sexual Identity
184(3)
A for Allies
187(2)
Questions for Discussion
189(1)
References and Further Reading
189(12)
Readings:
``Queers without Money''
192(4)
Amber Hollibaugh
``How Did the T Get in LGBT?''
196(2)
John Aravosis
``Why the T in LGBT Is Here to Stay''
198(3)
Susan Stryker
Intersectionalities
201(30)
The ``Down Low'' and Applied Intersectional Theory
204(3)
Women, Class, and Internationality
207(2)
Tools for Intersectional Analysis
209(4)
Questions for Discussion
213(1)
References and Further Reading
213(18)
Readings:
``Just a Closer Walk with Thee''
215(6)
Kathy Y. Wilson
``The Friday Night Bunch: A Lesbian Community in West Texas''
221(4)
Jean Brashear Nichols
``Mapping the Vicissitudes of Homosexual Identities in South Korea''
225(6)
Seo Dong-Jin
Section III: Literature and the Arts
Homosexed Art and Literature
231(38)
Whitman and His Descendants
232(5)
The Expatriates
237(2)
Performing Queer: Theater
239(4)
Homosexed Literature: Global Disruptions
243(1)
Fine Art: From the Beautiful to the Political
244(3)
Questions for Discussion
247(1)
References and Further Reading
248(21)
Readings:
``We Two Boys Together Clinging''
250(1)
Walt Whitman
``I, Too, Sing America''
250(1)
Langston Hughes
from ``Preservation of Innocence''
251(1)
James Baldwin
``A Supermarket in California''
252(1)
Allen Ginsberg
``Ode: Salute to the French Negro Poets''
253(1)
Frank O'Hara
``A History of Lesbianism''
254(2)
Judy Grahn
``Poem about My Rights''
256(3)
June Jordan
``A Woman Speaks''
259(1)
Audre Lorde
``The Women Who Hate Me''
260(9)
Dorothy Allison
Lesbian Pulp Novels and Gay Physique Pictorials
269(20)
Physique Magazines
270(4)
Lesbian Pulp Novels
274(4)
Gay Male Pulp Novels
278(2)
Transgender Novels
280(2)
Questions for Discussion
282(1)
References and Further Reading
282(7)
Reading:
excerpt from I Am a Woman
284(5)
Ann Bannon
Queer Transgressive Aesthetics
289(20)
Theoretical Transgressions: The Emergence of Queer Theory
290(1)
Art and Consumerism
291(3)
From Pornography to Sadomasochism
294(3)
Transgression and Politics
297(2)
Questions for Discussion
299(1)
References and Further Reading
300(9)
Reading:
from ``A Question of Class''
302(7)
Dorothy Allison
Censorship and Moral Panic
309(36)
Oscar Wilde
310(2)
Radclyffe Hall
312(4)
Mapplethorpe and Riggs
316(3)
Queering Children's Books
319(1)
Deepa Mehta
320(1)
Questions for Discussion
321(1)
References and Further Reading
322(23)
Readings:
from ``Art's Enemies: Censors to the Right of Me, Censors to the Left of Me''
325(3)
Steven C. Dubin
Judgment regarding The Well of Loneliness
328(1)
Sir Chartres Biron
``Wild Thing''
329(10)
Sapphire
from ``Local Sites/Global Contexts: The Transnational Trajectories of Fire and `The Quilt'''
339(6)
Gayatri Gopinath
Section IV: Media
Film and Television
345(28)
Visibility and Representation
346(3)
Varieties of Queerness in Contemporary Film
349(3)
Small-Screen Queers
352(5)
Questions for Discussion
357(1)
References and Further Reading
358(15)
Readings:
``Fishing for Girls: Romancing Lesbians in New Queer Cinema''
360(8)
Maria Pramaggiore
``Joining the Lesbians': Cinematic Regimes of Black Lesbian Visibility''
368(5)
Kara Keeling
Queers and the Internet
373(26)
Access, Connection, and Identity
374(2)
Internet Censorship and Corporatization
376(2)
Internet Activism
378(5)
Questions for Discussion
383(1)
References and Further Reading
384(15)
Readings:
``The Digital Queer: Weblogs and Internet Identity''
387(3)
Julie Rak
``Brown to Blond at Gay.com: Passing White in Queer Cyberspace''
390(9)
Andil Gosine
The Politics of Location: Alternative Media and the Search for Queer Space
399(32)
Documentary Films
400(3)
Film and Music Festivals
403(2)
Queer Music
405(2)
LGBT Journalism: Magazines, Newspapers, and Comics
407(4)
Many Journeys, Many Homes
411(2)
Questions for Discussion
413(1)
References and Further Reading
414(17)
Readings:
from ``Urban Space and Homosexuality: The Example of the Marais, Paris' `Gay Ghetto'''
416(8)
Michael Sibalis
``Gay Enclaves Face Prospect of Being Passe''
424(3)
Patricia Leigh Brown
``Where's Mo?'' and ``The Game of Alternative Life'' from The Indelible Alison Bechdel
427(2)
Alison Bechdel
``Demographic Rift'' from Split-Level Dykes to Watch Out For
429(2)
Alison Bechdel
Glossary 431(4)
Credits 435(2)
Index 437(24)
About the Authors 461
Deborah T. Meem is professor and head of the Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Cincinnati. Her academic specialties are Victorian literature, lesbian studies, and the nineteenth-century woman's novel. She earned a PhD from Stony Brook University in 1985. Her work has appeared in Journal of the History of Sexuality, Feminist Teacher, Studies in Popular Culture, and elsewhere. She has edited three works by Victorian novelist and journalist Eliza Lynn Linton: The Rebel of the Family (Broadview, 2002), Realities (Valancourt, 2010), and The Autobiography of Christopher Kirkland (Victorian Secrets, 2011). With Michelle Gibson, she has coedited Femme/Butch: New Considerations of the Way We Want to Go (2002) and Lesbian Academic Couples (2005), both published by Haworth Press. With Jonathan Alexander, she wrote "Dorian Gray, Tom Ripley, and the Queer Closet" (CLCWeb 2003). Michelle Gibson is Professor Emerita of the Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Cincinnati. Her scholarship focuses on sexuality studies and pedagogy. Her most recent writing applies queer and postmodern identity theories to pedagogical practice and popular culture. In retirement, she writes and publishes poetry and maintains a blog called ProfSpazz at profspazz.com. With Jonathan Alexander, she edited QP: Queer Poetry, an online poetry journal, and she and Alexander also edited a strain of JAC (Journal of Advanced Composition) titled "Queer Composition(s)." With Deborah Meem, she coedited Femme/Butch: New Considerations of the Way We Want to Go (2002) and Lesbian Academic Couples (2005). Jonathan Alexander is professor of English and Chancellor's Fellow at the University of California, Irvine. He is a three-time recipient of the Ellen Nold Award for Best Articles in the field of computers and composition studies, and in 2011 was awarded the Charles Moran Award for Distinguished Contributions to the Field of Computers and Writing. His books include Literacy, Sexuality, Pedagogy: Theory and Practice for Composition Studies (2008) and Digital Youth: Emerging Literacies on the World Wide Web (2005); the coedited collections Bisexuality and Queer Theory: Intersections, Connections and Challenges (2011), Bisexuality and Transgenderism: InterSEXions of the Others (2004), and Role Play: Distance Learning and the Teaching of Writing (2006); and the coauthored books Argument Now: A Brief Rhetoric (2005) and Understanding Rhetoric: A Graphic Guide to Composition (2014).