Lýsing:
Thoroughly updated with over 30 newly written chapters, this edition of the Routledge Handbook of Sexuality, Gender, Health and Rights brings together academics and practitioners from around the world to provide an authoritative and up-to-date account of the field. Social researchers and their allies have worked hard in past decades to find new ways of understanding sexuality in a rapidly changing world.
Growing attention is now given to the way sexuality intersects with other structures such as gender, age, ethnicity/race and disability, and increasing value is seen in a positive approach focused on ethics, pleasure, mutuality and reciprocity. This Handbook explores: theory, politics and early development of sexuality studies ways in which language, discourse and identification have become central to research on sex, sexuality and gender key issues across the broad media and digital ecology, demonstrating the centrality of representation, communication and digital technologies to sexual and gender practices research focusing on the body and its sexual pleasures work on forms of inequality, violence and abuse that are linked to sex, gender and sexuality The Handbook is an essential reference for researchers and educators working in the fields of sexuality studies, gender studies, sexual health and human rights, and offers key reading for mid-level and advanced students.
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- Höfundur: Aggleton, Peter
- Útgáfa:2
- Útgáfudagur: 2023-12-22
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- Format:ePub
- ISBN 13: 9781003801849
- Print ISBN: 9781032243986
- ISBN 10: 1003801846
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Boxes
- Editors
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements and permissions
- 1 Sexuality, gender, health and rights: An introduction
- References
- Part I Pioneering beginnings
- 2 The importance of being historical: Understanding the making of sexualities
- Understanding the present
- The Great Transition
- A conclusion
- References
- 3 ‘Sex involves something you are, not just something you do’: Mary Calderone and the fight for sexual health
- Childhood and its uses
- Early career
- Core beliefs
- Fighting for sexual health
- Accomplishments
- Legacy
- Notes
- References
- 4 Anthropological foundations of sexuality, health and rights: 1920s–2020s
- Early anthropological pioneers in the field of sexuality
- Twentieth- and twenty-first-century transformations
- Conclusion
- References
- 5 Alfred C. Kinsey’s legacy and the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University
- Historical elements
- Methods and innovation
- Theory and theoretical model development
- Future directions
- References
- 6 Sexuality and the turn to citizenship
- Introduction
- Sexual citizenship studies
- Critiques of sexual citizenship
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 7 Making a sociology of gender and sexuality
- Introduction
- Making the Difference (1982) – class, schooling and gender
- Gender and Power (1987) – economics, power and affect
- Masculinities (1995) – studying men from below and within
- Southern Theory (2007) – imperialism, colonialism and knowledge
- Thinking gender, health, transition
- The Good University (2019) – intellectuals and the wider world
- References
- 2 The importance of being historical: Understanding the making of sexualities
- 8 Two(Spirit)-Eyed Seeing: Honouring gender and sexual diversity for those Indigenous to Turtle Island
- Introduction: Tawow (Cree: there’s space)
- Part 1: ‘They can never burn the stars’
- Eternal Belonging
- Forming a Two-Spirit research group
- Two(Spirit)-Eyed Seeing
- Part 2: Two-Spirit is not for me and yet it inspires me
- Two-Spirit in the Indigenous context
- A European-settler in the Two-Spirit Dry Lab
- Two-Spirit and quantitative methods
- Part 3: ‘Showing up as ourselves for a Two-Spirit future’
- Two-Spirit and Indigenous neurodiversity
- Two-Spirit liberates us from our masks
- Conclusion: We are one together
- Notes
- References
- 9 Becoming hijra in Dhaka: Discourse, pleasure and identification
- Socio-cultural construction of hijra as a category of abjection
- Hijragiri, or the occupation of the hijras, as a site of active becoming
- Genital ambiguity, asexuality and emasculation
- Erasure of desire and sexuality in hijra representations
- Hijra as an alternative erotic space
- Ulti as an alternative to the heteronormative Bangla world
- Straddling and navigating multiple ideological frameworks as acts of agency and creative power
- Concluding thoughts
- Notes
- References
- 10 The health and human rights of people with intersex variations
- Introduction
- Defining intersex people
- Commonalities and intersectionalities
- General health issues
- Human rights violations in medical settings
- Sex determination and diagnosis
- Research and evidence
- Discrimination and stigmatisation
- Violence and infanticide
- Registration of sex
- Access to justice and remedies
- Conclusions
- References
- 11 Living under the shadow of the law: Sexual citizenship and belonging in Singapore and Australia
- Introduction
- Background
- Australia: decriminalisation and marriage equality
- Singapore: Section 377A of the Penal Code
- Approach
- Findings
- Health
- Education and employment
- Personal relationships and the future
- Discussion and conclusion
- Note
- References
- 12 Gender and sexuality identities in social media and everyday life: The expansion and redefinition of non-binary gender and bisexuality
- Introduction
- Emerging gender and sexual identities
- Non-binary gender identification
- The matter of bisexuality
- Conclusion
- References
- 13 An unhappy marriage?: Sex segregation and inclusion debates in women’s sport
- Sex segregation as success story?
- Eligibility regulation as a fraught project
- Protection for whom?
- The harms of normative femininity
- Conclusion: Can a separate category be inclusive?
- Notes
- References
- 14 ‘Cripping’ intellectual disability and sexuality in media representations: Conundrums and possibilities
- Introduction
- Intellectual disability, sexuality and representation in popular media
- ‘Cripping’ sexualities
- Analysing media
- Seeing from an ableist and heteronormative lens
- Acceptance by erasing disability
- Diminishing people labelled/with intellectual disabilities
- What about the voices of disabled people themselves?
- So, do these representations ‘crip’ intellectual disability and sexuality?
- References
- 15 Ritual, modernity and well-being: Queer spirit mediums and ritual healing in mainland Southeast Asia
- Spirit mediumship as a healing tradition
- The modern sources of contemporary Southeast Asian spirit cults
- Spirit ritual and global queer cultures: challenging the secular/religion binary
- Limits to the transgressive potential of queer ritual specialists
- Conclusion
- Note
- References
- 16 Beliefs about sexuality and gender in identity discourses online
- Introduction
- Ontological beliefs about gender and sexual orientation
- Gender and sexual identity discourses in networked counterpublics
- Conclusion
- References
- 17 Automating vulnerability: Algorithms, artificial intelligence and machine learning for gender and sexual minorities
- Introduction
- Algorithms, machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI)
- Data collection and the automation of gender recognition
- Algorithm design
- Making decisions/recommendations
- Acting on decisions: the future of solutions and recommendations?
- Conclusion
- References
- 18 Digital intimacy in China
- Introduction
- Gender, sexuality and censorship in China
- Censorship of feminist advocacy
- The emergence of boys’ love culture as a feminist counter culture
- Transforming intimacies in online dating
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 19 Queer women and digital platforms: Identity modulation for digital sexual citizenship, and beyond?
- Seeing digital representation through identity modulation
- Digital sexual citizenship and platform hurdles
- Beyond citizenship?
- No solutions but liveable moments
- References
- 20 Playing with roles and representations: Challenging the stability of gender, sex and sexuality in video games
- Introduction
- Games and gamers
- Play and representation
- Roles and performance
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 21 Erotic representations of gender diversity: A computer-assisted linguistic analysis of online erotica
- Introduction
- Representations of gender diversity
- Interpreting gender diversity in erotic narrative
- Findings
- Transgender
- Shemale
- Tranny
- Sissy
- Conclusion
- References
- 22 Express yourself: Fashion, freedom and sexual politics in the twenty-first century
- Introduction
- Fashion and the success of sexual movements worldwide
- The global connectedness of social movements
- Accepting sexuality as politics worldwide
- Conclusion
- Note
- References
- 23 Homosexuality and normality: The reception of gay male representations on film and television
- Introduction
- A short history of (gay) sexual minority representation in the media
- Audience responses to LGBTQ representations
- Gay representations in the eyes of Flemish non-straight men
- Baby Boomers
- Generation X
- Millennials
- Generation Z
- Discussion and conclusion
- References
- 24 Ukuchindila Nabwinga: Bemba women, sexual dance and agency
- Introduction
- Marriage process among the Bemba
- Framing a community of practice
- Ukucindila nabwinga (dancing for the bride)
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 25 Sex in motion: Some sexual scenes in Brazil
- Redenção Park, Porto Alegre, January 2008
- The Astor Cinema, Salvador, April 2008
- Windsor Cinema, São Paulo, May 2008
- So what does all this mean?
- Conclusions
- References
- 26 BDSM, intercorporeality and the feeling body
- Introduction
- Theoretical framework
- Method and ethical reflections
- Analysis
- BDSM as an intercorporeal practice
- Subspace, domspace and wordless empathy
- Intimacy, emotions and bodily empathy
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 27 Flirting, erotic interactions and sexual choreography among urban youth: Hip-Hop in New York City
- The Hip-Hop club
- The courtship of dancing
- Establishing and transgressing boundaries
- The Hip-Hop scene and young people’s sexuality
- Notes
- References
- 28 Ecosexuality: Art practices for queering the Earth, healing and recovering
- Affectionate play
- ‘Earth as lover’: Ecosexual is the new sexual
- Towards a posthumanist re-imagining of environmental laws
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 29 SPACES TO BE AND FLOURISH: Dance as livelihood, status and belonging amongst kothis in India
- Colonial reform and understanding the long-term collateral damage
- Dance as a passion and a profession amongst kothis
- Changing spaces, increasing precarity and new opportunities
- Dance and inclusion
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 30 The political economy of pleasure
- What does pleasure mean in Western culture?
- Indulgence and pleasure, good and evil
- Pleasure, work and the creation of modernity
- Pleasure, race and civilisation
- Consumer capitalism and commodified pleasure
- Conclusion
- References
- 31 Intimate partner violence: Bringing about change through successful interventions
- Introduction
- Processes of change to prevent IPV
- Rural Response System, Ghana
- Indashyikirwa, Rwanda
- Stepping Stones and Creating Futures, Durban, South Africa
- Zindagii Shoista, Tajikistan
- Individual level pathways to change
- Relationship level pathways
- Community level pathways
- Ten elements of success in preventing IPV
- Elements of success in programme design
- Implementation elements of success
- Necessary design elements only where relevant to the approach
- Discussion
- Implications for effective IPV prevention programming
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 32 Masculinity crisis?: The nature and origins of sexual violence and corrective rape in South Africa
- Introduction
- The naturalising of male privilege and the emergence of ‘crisis’
- Feminist and gay liberation movements and the threat to patriarchal interests
- Masculinity in the media and re-assertions of hegemonic masculinity
- ‘Corrective rape’ in contemporary South Africa
- Sociocultural realities: The foundations of violent masculinity
- The judicial response to sexual minority rights
- Conclusion
- References
- 33 Becoming teachable, staying in community: Engaged research on incest in Mexico, before and after COVID-19
- Becoming teachable
- Staying in community
- Winter 2009
- Activist research and going back home
- The invisibility of incest in Mexican research
- Impressions from the field
- Notes
- References
- 34 ‘I’d give him a blow job just to get out of there’: Sexual citizenship and the social production of campus sexual assault
- Overview
- Methods and setting
- Narratives
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 35 Sexual violence in South African men’s prisons: Causes, consequences and promising practices
- Introduction
- Making ‘women’, taking ‘wives’
- Vanishing violence
- Anxious muddlings
- Broadening understandings of sexual violence behind bars
- Journeys towards and into prison
- The role of chance in precarious safety
- Working towards sexual safety behind bars
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- 36 From sexology to sexual health and rights
- Origins of the field of sexology
- From Germany to the USA
- Sexology gains a foothold in public health
- A new sexual revolution and the demand for a public health response
- From sexology to sexual health: WAS changes its name
- More recent advances
- WHO indicators
- World Sexual Health Day established
- Sexual Rights Declaration 2014
- Sexual Pleasure Declaration 2021
- Conclusion
- References
- 37 ‘Safe sex ain’t for sissies!’ (with apologies to Bette Davis)
- The pandemic begins
- Getting to the beginning
- The invention of safe sex
- Whatever happened to safe sex?
- Note
- References
- 38 Sexual health beyond the buzzword: The turn to social justice
- The rise of ‘sexual health’
- Interpretive, programmatic and political challenges
- Sexual health and social justice
- Conclusion
- Note
- References
- 39 Innovation in HIV prevention technologies: The currents and eddies of progress within and across contexts
- Situating HIV prevention: How are we doing?
- Materially entangled: Biomedical technology entwined with social influence in HIV prevention
- Technology effects: Case studies of PrEP and U=U
- Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)
- Undetectable equals Untransmittable (U=U)
- HIV prevention and broader sexual health
- Conclusion
- References
- 40 Sex, drugs and biomedical prevention: Rethinking sexual health through PrEP research in Peru and HPV vaccine roll-out in Mexico
- Introduction
- Sexual health and biotechnologies: A brief history
- Travelling understandings of sexual health, pre-illness and risk
- HIV and the making of Peruvian gay sex as risky
- Travelling HPV assemblages and stratified sexual risk in Mexico
- New understandings of sexual health produced through biomedical prevention interventions
- From at-risk subjects to risky subjects: Capitalising on PrEP research in Peru
- Risky sexualities and the responsibilisation of Mexican cisgender females through stratified HPV vaccine implementation
- Risky sex(ualities), transnational sites of concern and the ongoing politics of biomedical prevention
- Notes
- References
- 41 Achieving trans pregnancy and parenthood: The impacts of cisnormativity on trans people’s reproductive autonomy
- Understanding sex and gender
- (Cis)gendering reproduction
- From individual rights to reproductive justice: a conceptual framework
- Making cisnormativity visible
- Social perceptions of achieving trans pregnancy
- Legal self-determination and the regulation of reproduction
- Access to comprehensive information
- Resisting cisnormativity
- Conclusion
- References
- 42 Poverty and erotic equity
- Introduction
- Socioeconomic concepts and public health research
- What evidence connects socioeconomics with sexual flourishing?
- Potential pathways between poverty and sexual well-being
- Conclusions and takeaways
- References
- 43 Sexual rights: Ever-contested, but never more important
- Introduction
- Defining sexual rights
- Political
- Legal
- Technical
- Where legal, political and technical expertise collide: Moving from the global to the national
- The centrality of civil society movements in advancing work around sexual rights
- Moving forwards: We can’t move backwards
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 44 Health and human rights inequities impacting sex workers globally
- Human rights and health inequities faced by sex workers and their structural determinants
- Highlighting gaps in support and the need for structural change: Sex workers’ experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic
- Evidence-based interventions and best practices for advancing sex workers’ health and human rights
- Decriminalisation of sex work
- Community empowerment
- Multi-level and integrated interventions
- Conclusion and recommendations for action
- References
- 45 Sex tech in an age of surveillance capitalism: Design, data and governance
- Histories and futures of sex tech
- From sexual rights to sexual justice
- Surveillance data and sexual health
- Design: From the margins
- Data: Sexual surveillance and political economy
- Governance: Carceral technologies
- Sex tech for sexual justice
- References
- 46 Justice through the erotic: Puta politics, knowledge and feminism as guides for how to move beyond binaries and destabilise contradictions
- Puta politics
- Moving beyond good and bad sex
- Moving towards justice through the erotic
- Notes
- References
- 47 Good sex liberates: Why sexual rights and erotic justice should get into bed with pleasure
- Getting intimate with us
- Starting out: Sexual debut and overcoming the awkwardness
- Seeking pleasure: Where are our pleasures and desires in sexual health?
- Collective imagination and creative safer sex eroticisation, or how to create an erotic collective
- Finding those we love: the global mapping of pleasure and its practices
- Raising collective consciousness to orgasm: Poor women have orgasms too
- Erotic Justice – does it pay well?
- Pleasurable chronicles for the greater good: Bridging our pleasure gaps
- Finishing off: Connecting erotic well-being to sexual pleasure, fulfilling life, joy and freedom
- Notes
- References
- 48 Dr Frankenstein’s hydra: Contours, meanings and effects of anti-gender politics
- A closer look at anti-gender politics
- Four waves of anti-gender politics
- A diversity of targets
- Discursive labyrinths
- The hydra of Dr Frankenstein
- Beyond backlash
- The role of gender
- Notes
- References
- A closer look at anti-gender politics
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