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Handbook of the New Sexuality Studies [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 498 pages, aukštis x plotis: 246x174 mm, weight: 862 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Mar-2012
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415512433
  • ISBN-13: 9780415512435
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 498 pages, aukštis x plotis: 246x174 mm, weight: 862 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Mar-2012
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415512433
  • ISBN-13: 9780415512435
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
As the field of sexuality studies has become a growth area in academia and classes on sexuality studies are incorporated into various disciplines, the expanding book market has been filled with specialist oriented texts which are often theoretically focused and contain too many summaries for an undergraduate audience. Addressing this imbalance, this key new volume presents the field of sexuality in an accessible and engaging way for undergraduates.



Breaking new ground, both substantively and stylistically, this book offers students, academics and researchers an accessible, engaging introduction and overview of this emerging field. Its central premise is to explore the social character of sexuality, the role of social differences such as race or nationality in creating sexual variation, and the ways sex is entangled in relations of power and inequality. Through this novel approach, the field of sexuality is considered, for the first time, in multicultural, global, and comparative terms and from a truly social perspective.



This important volume consists of over fifty short and original essays on the key topics and themes in sexuality studies, and interviews with twelve leading scholars in the field which convey some of the most innovative work being done. Each contribution clearly conveys the latest research with examples. Ideal for students of gender and sexuality studies, this topical and timely volume will be an invaluable resource to all those with an interest in sexuality studies.
Acknowledgments x
General introduction xi
Part 1 Sex as a social fact
1(26)
1 Theoretical perspectives
3(11)
Steven Seidman
2 The social construction of sexuality
14(7)
Jeffrey Weeks
3 Surveying sex
21(6)
Edward Laumann
Part 2 Sexual meanings
27(52)
4 Sex and the family: the power of ideology
29(7)
Maureen Sullivan
5 Romantic love
36(9)
Eva Illouz
6 Sexual pleasure
45(6)
Kelly James
7 Purity and pollution: sex as a moral discourse
51(8)
Nancy L. Fischer
8 Sex and power
59(5)
Kristen Barber
9 Gay and straight rites of passage
64(8)
Chet Meeks
10 Coming out in Italy
72(7)
Cirus Rinaldi
Claudio Cappotto
Part 3 Sexual bodies and behaviors
79(54)
11 Medicine and the making of a sexual body
81(9)
Celia Roberts
12 Sexualizing Asian male bodies
90(6)
Travis S. K. Kong
13 Sex and the senior woman
96(6)
Meika Loe
14 Polishing the pearl: discoveries of the clitoris
102(5)
Lisa Jean Moore
15 Orgasm
107(7)
Juliet Richters
16 Anal sex: phallic and other meanings
114(7)
Simon Hardy
17 Sexual intercourse
121(6)
Kerwin Kaye
18 Viagra and the coital imperative
127(6)
Nicola Gavey
Part 4 Sexual identities
133(118)
19 Straight men
135(8)
James J. Dean
20 Lesbians
143(8)
Tamsin Wilton
21 The disappearance of the homosexual
151(6)
Henning Bech
22 The bisexual menace revisited: or, shaking up social categories is hard to do
157(7)
Kristin G. Esterberg
23 Bisexualities in America
164(9)
Paula C. Rodriguez Rust
24 Transgendering: challenging the "normal"
173(7)
Kimberly Tauches
25 Transsexual, transgender, and queer
180(8)
Viviane Namaste
26 Multiple identities: race, class, and gender in lesbian and gay affirming Protestant congregations
188(63)
Krista McQueeney
Part 5 Sexual institutions and sexual commerce
251(1)
27 One is not born a bride: how weddings regulate heterosexuality
197(5)
Chrys Ingraham
28 Change and continuity in American marriage
202(6)
Erica Hunter
29 Shopping for love: online dating and the making of a cyber culture of romance
208(9)
Sophia DeMasi
30 Conflicts at the tubs: bathhouses and gay culture and politics in the United States
217(7)
Jason Hendrickson
31 Sexual tourism
224(8)
Julia O'Connell Davidson
32 Sex sells, but what else does it do? The American porn industry
232(7)
Chris Pappas
33 Sex workers
239(7)
Wendy Chapkis
34 Condoms in the global economy
246(5)
Peter Chua
Part 6 Sexual cultures
251(64)
35 The body, disability, and sexuality
253(9)
Thomas J. Gerschick
36 Internet sex: the seductive "freedom to"
262(9)
Dennis D. Waskul
37 Gay men dancing: circuit parties
271(9)
Russell Westhaver
38 The time of the sadomasochist: hunting with(in) the "tribus"
280(8)
Darren Langdridge
39 Sex and young Japanese heterosexual men
288(6)
Genaro Castro-Vazquez
40 Sex and rock `n' roll
294(5)
Mimi Schippers
41 Secret sex and the down low brotherhood
299(4)
Justin Luc Hoy
42 Wait ... hip hop sexualities
303(6)
Thomas F. DeFrantz
43 Feederism: a new sexual pleasure and subculture
309(6)
Dina Giovanelli
Natalie M. Peluso
Part 7 Sexual regulation and inequality
315(88)
44 Sexuality, state, and nation
317(8)
Jyoti Puri
45 The sexual rights of women and homosexuals in Iran
325(5)
Hamid Parnian
46 The marriage contract
330(7)
Mary Bernstein
47 Popular culture constructs sexuality
337(5)
Joshua Gamson
48 Christianity and the regulation of sexuality in the United States
342(7)
Joshua Grove
49 Law and the regulation of the obscene
349(8)
Phoebe Christina Godfrey
50 Schools and the social control of sexuality
357(8)
Melinda S. Miceli
51 Healing (disorderly) desire: medical-therapeutic regulation of sexuality
365(12)
P. J. McGann
52 Therapeutic institutions
377(5)
Christopher Grant Kelly
53 Gender and the organization of heterosexual intimacy
382(6)
Daniel Santore
54 Sexual politics in intimate relationships: sexual coercion and harassment
388(8)
Lisa K. Waldner
55 Sexual and racial violence and American masculinity
396(7)
Evelyn A. Clark
Part 8 Sexual politics
403
56 Gay marriage. Why now? Why at all?
405(6)
Reese Kelly
57 Gay men and lesbians in the Netherlands
411(5)
Gert Hekma
Jan Willem Duyvendak
58 Queering the family
416(7)
Mary C. Burke
Kristine A. Olsen
59 The pro-family movement
423(7)
Tina Fetner
60 Covenant marriage: reflexivity and retrenchment in the politics of intimacy
430(7)
Dwight Fee
61 The politics of AIDS: sexual pleasure and danger
437(7)
Jennifer Gunsaullus
62 The US Supreme Court and the politics of gay and lesbian rights
444(10)
Gregory Maddox
63 Gender and sexual politics: American gay rights and feminist movements
454(5)
Megan Murphy
64 Politics of sex education
459(6)
Janice M. Irvine
65 Sex workers' rights movements
465
Danielle Antoinette Hidalgo
Steven Seidman is Professor of Sociology at the State University of New York at Albany. He is the author of, among other books, Romantic Longings: Love in America, 1830-1980 (Routledge, 1991), Embattled Eros: Sexual Politics and Ethics in America (Routledge, 1992), Difference Troubles: Queering Social Theory and Sexual Politics (1997), Beyond the closet (Routledge, 2002), and The Social construction of sexuality (2003). He co-edited Social Postmodernism: Beyond Identity Politics (1995) and edited Queer Theory/Sociology (1996) and the Lesbian and Gay reader (2002).



Nancy Fischer is an Assistant Professor in the Sociology Department at Augsburg College, Minneapolis. Her research and teaching is in the areas of urban sociology, sexuality and the sociology of law.



Chet Meeks is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Georgia State University. His interests include contemporary social theory, sexuality studies, and cultural sociology.