Culture, Society And Sexuality - Oxford University Press.pdf

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Contents
List of Figures
x
List of Tables
xi
Editors’ Note
xii
Acknowledgements
xiii
Richard Parker and Peter Aggleton
1
Section I: Culture, Society and Sexuality
11
Part 1: Conceptual Frameworks
13
Chapter 2 Sexual Matters: On Conceptualizing Sexuality in History
15
William Simon and John H. Gagnon
29
Chapter 4 Anthropology Rediscovers Sexuality: A Theoretical Comment
39
Part 2: Gender and Power
55
Chapter 5 Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis
57
Chapter 6 ‘Gender’ for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word
76
Chapter 7 ‘That We Should All Turn Queer?’: Homosexual Stigma in the Making of
Manhood and the Breaking of a Revolution in Nicaragua
97
Roger N. Lancaster
vii
Chapter 1 Introduction
Robert A. Padgug
Chapter 3 Sexual Scripts
Carole S. Vance
Joan Wallach Scott
Donna J. Haraway
CONTENTS
Part 3: From Gender to Sexuality
117
Chapter 8 Discourse, Desire and Sexual Deviance: Some Problems in a History of
Homosexuality
119
Chapter 9 Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality
143
Chapter 10 ‘The Unclean Motion of the Generative Parts’: Frameworks in Western
Thought on Sexuality
179
Part 4: Sexual Identities/Sexual Communities
197
Chapter 11 Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence
199
Chapter 12 The Hijras of India: Cultural and Individual Dimensions of an
Institutionalized Third Gender Role
226
Chapter 13 Capitalism and Gay Identity
239
Section II: Sexuality, Sexual Meanings and HIV/AIDS
249
Part 5: Sexual Classifications
251
Chapter 14 ‘Within Four Walls’: Brazilian Sexual Culture and HIV/AIDS
253
Chapter 15 Silences: ‘Hispanics’, AIDS, and Sexual Practices
267
Chapter 16 HIV, Heroin and Heterosexual Relations
284
Part 6: Sexual Meanings and HIV/AIDS Prevention
305
Chapter 17 Prostitution Viewed Cross-culturally: Toward Recontextualizing Sex Work in
AIDS Intervention Research
307
Chapter 18 Sexual Diversity, Cultural Analysis, and AIDS Education in Brazil
325
Chapter 19 Sexuality, Identity and Community: The Experience of MESMAC
337
Part 7: Sexual Representations and the Politics of AIDS
355
Chapter 20 AIDS, Homophobia, and Biomedical Discourse: An Epidemic of Signification
357
viii
Jeffrey Weeks
Gayle S. Rubin
Robert W. Connell and Gary W. Dowsett
Adrienne Rich
Serena Nanda
John D’Emilio
Richard Parker
Ana Maria Alonso and Maria Teresa Koreck
Stephanie Kane
Barbara O. de Zalduondo
Richard Parker
Katie Deverell and Alan Prout
Paula Treichler
CONTENTS
Chapter 21 Inventing ‘African AIDS’
387
Chapter 22 Safer Sex as Community Practice
405
Part 8: Methodological Approaches
417
Chapter 23 Sexual Culture, HIV Transmission, and AIDS Research
419
Chapter 24 Mapping Terra Incognita: Sex Research for AIDS Prevention – An Urgent
Agenda for the 1990s
434
Janet Holland, Caroline Ramazanoglu, Sue Sharpe and Rachel Thomson
457
Author/Subject Index
473
ix
Cindy Patton
Simon Watney
Richard G. Parker, Gilbert Herdt and Manuel Carballo
Ralph Bolton
Chapter 25 Feminist Methodology and Young People’s Sexuality
List of Figures
9.1 The sex hierarchy: the charmed circle vs. the outer limits
153
9.2 The sex hierarchy: the struggle over where to draw the line
154
16.1 Demographics of heterosexual sex partner sample
289
16.2 Non-intravenous drug use in a small heterosexual sample
290
16.3 Sex practices in a small heterosexual sample
290
16.4 Age and sexual relationships of a small heterosexual sample
291
16.5 Social categories of heterosexual sample in respect to drug use
293
19.1 The Community Development strategy used by MESMAC
351
24.1 Dendogram of sexual concepts using complete linkage
446
24.2 Two-dimensional plot of sexual concepts on Factors 1 and 2
447
24.3 Two-dimensional plot of sexual concepts on Factors 1 and 3
448
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