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Book

Understanding Global Sexualities

Book

Understanding Global Sexualities

DOI link for Understanding Global Sexualities

Understanding Global Sexualities book

New frontiers

Understanding Global Sexualities

DOI link for Understanding Global Sexualities

Understanding Global Sexualities book

New frontiers
Edited ByPeter Aggleton, Paul Boyce, Henrietta L. Moore, Richard Parker
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 20 April 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315538655
Pages 280
eBook ISBN 9781315538655
Subjects Health and Social Care, Social Sciences
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Aggleton, P., Boyce, P., Moore, H.L., & Parker, R. (Eds.). (2012). Understanding Global Sexualities: New frontiers (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315538655

ABSTRACT

Over the course of the past thirty years, there has been an explosion of work on sexuality, both conceptually and methodologically. From a relatively limited, specialist field, the study of sexuality has expanded across a wide range of social sciences. Yet as the field has grown, it has become apparent that a number of leading edge critical issues remain.

This theory-building book explores some of the areas in which there is major and continuing debate, for example, about the relationship between sexuality and gender; about the nature and status of heterosexuality; about hetero- and homo-normativity; about the influence and intersection of class, race, age and other factors in sexual trajectories, identities and lifestyles; and about how best to understand the new forms of sexuality that are emerging in both rich world and developing world contexts.

With contributions from leading and new scholars and activists from across the globe, this book highlights tensions or ‘flash-points’ in contemporary debate, and offers some innovative ways forward in terms of thinking about sexuality – both theoretically and with respect to policy and programme development. An extended essay by Henrietta Moore introduces the volume, and an afterword by Jeffrey Weeks offers pointers for the future.

The contributors bring together a range of experiences and a variety of disciplinary perspectives in engaging with three key themes of sexual subjectivity and global transformations, sexualities in practice, and advancing new thinking on sexuality in policy and programmatic contexts. It is of interest to students, researchers and activists in sexuality, sexual health and gender studies, especially those working from public health, sociological and anthropological perspectives.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|17 pages

Sexuality encore

ByHenrietta L. Moore

part 1|70 pages

Global transformations and sexual subjectivities

chapter 2|13 pages

Normalised transgressions: consumption, the market, and sexuality in Mexico

ByRodrigo Parrini, Ana Amuchástegui

chapter 3|15 pages

‘The personal is political and the political is personal’: sexuality, politics and social movements in modern Iran

ByPardis Mahdavi

chapter 4|17 pages

The paradox of pluralisation

Masculinities, androgyny and male anxiety in contemporary China 1
ByDerek Hird

chapter 5|9 pages

Rights amidst wrongs

The paradoxes of gender rights-based approaches towards AIDS in South Africa
ByMark Hunter

chapter 6|14 pages

The ambivalent sexual subject

HIV prevention and male-to-male intimacy in India
ByPaul Boyce

part 2|80 pages

Sexualities in practice

chapter 7|17 pages

‘No one saw us’: reputation as an axis of sexual identity 1

ByJennifer S. Hirsch, Holly Wardlow, Harriet Phinney

chapter 8|16 pages

Beyond resistance

Gay and lala recreation in Beijing
ByWilliam F. Schroeder

chapter 9|14 pages

The limits of ‘lesbian’

Nomenclature and normativity in feminist approaches to sexuality, gender and development
ByCarolyn H. Williams

chapter 10|15 pages

Disability, sexuality and sexual health

ByPoul Rohleder, Leslie Swartz

chapter 11|16 pages

Bodies and their signs

Acknowledging and interpreting erotic responses
ByAnne-Lise Middelthon, Vincent Colapietro

part 3|89 pages

Sexualities in theory, policy and programmatic contexts

chapter 12|15 pages

Some notes on new frontiers of sexuality and globalisation

ByTom Boellstorff

chapter 13|17 pages

Transnationalism in sexuality studies

An ‘Africanist’ perspective
ByMarc Epprecht

chapter 14|15 pages

The right to say no

Gender empowerment in US global HIV-prevention policy
ByAnne W. Esacove

chapter 15|14 pages

Sexuality and desire in racialised contexts

ByMara Viveros Vigoya

chapter 16|15 pages

From research to policy and practice

ByRichard Parker, Peter Aggleton

chapter 17|11 pages

Reflections on the new frontiers in sexualities research

ByJeffrey Weeks
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