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Index
Contents Contributors Acknowledgements and permissions 1 Introduction Part I Pioneering beginnings
2 Margaret Sanger
Sanger’s contribution and legacy From the past to the present Notes References
3 Anthropological foundations of sexuality, health and rights
Early anthropological pioneers in sexuality Transition to the later twentieth century Conclusion Note References
4 The importance of being historical
Understanding the present The great transition A conclusion References
5 Research innovation
Historical elements Methods and innovation Theory and theoretical model development Future directions References
6 The social reality of sexual rights
Symbolic interactionism, critical humanism and sexual conduct Understanding sexualities Some theses on human rights
Pragmatism and everyday life Meanings, signs and symbols Cultures as emergent complexities Interaction and others Self, others and dialogue Storytelling and narratives Political cultures and social movements The significance of emergence and history The global and the cosmopolitan
Human social life is global
Conclusion Notes References
7 Recent developments in US sexuality research
So where do we begin? Recent developments
An expanded research agenda and many more researchers Diversified research foci
Current challenges and needs
The backdrop: continuing controversy The need for training The need for policy-relevant research
Research funding Future directions
Lifecourse/quality of life Institutional analysis relevant for policy development Processes/experiences/language Sexuality in time, space and the body Movements
Conclusion Notes References
Part II Language, discourse and sexual categories
8 ‘Lesbians’, modernity and global translation
Tombois and their girlfriends Falling into the lesbi world Conclusion Notes References
9 Hidden love
Research setting Data and methods
Selection of participants Data collection
Peer group discussions In-depth interviews Conducting the research
Findings
Attitudes toward sexuality
Good behaviour Sex is wrong
Notions of the ideal relationships
Clandestine relationships Entering a ‘serious’ relationship Relationship type
Sexual activity
Proving virginity
Discussion References
10 Thai (trans)genders and (homo)sexualities in a global context
Globalisation is not homogenising world queer cultures
Contemporary Asian transgenders are not ‘traditional’ Americanisation is not the main source of global queering Global queering began before ‘globalisation’
Reading and rereading Thai queer history
Foucault: biopower in Thailand? Trumbach (via Foucault): Thailand’s gender revolution D’Emilio: capitalism and queer autonomy beyond the west
Conclusions
A queer political economy of proliferating gender and sexual difference
Notes References
11 Hijras, ‘AIDS cosmopolitanism’ and questions of izzat in Hyderabad1
Hijras and visible regimes of difference
‘Sexual’ targets of risk behaviour: geographies of innocence and blame Hijra and the ‘sexual rights’ paradigm Hijras and the moral economy of izzat
Implications/conclusions: sexual difference and the cosmopolitics of care Notes References
12 Intersexuality, biomedical regulation and sexual rights in Brazil1
Hide and seek: from ‘the search for the sex’ to the materialisation of gender Making the decision A difficult knot to untie: health, bioethics and sexual rights Some final considerations Notes References
13 Understanding sex between men in Senegal
Goor-jigeen (men-women)
Performing social roles in the women’s world New naming categories
Men becoming women Rising homophobia Conclusions Notes References
Part III Reproductive and sexual health
14 Why a history of childhood sexuality?
Masturbation phobia and the compulsive body The unthinking autoerotic child The question of agency: Moll’s sexual child Insights from the past Notes References
15 From sexology to sexual health
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
Conclusion References
16 Sexual and reproductive
References
17 Sex as ‘risk of conception’?
Sexual frames within current family planning discourse Well-intentioned roots Future directions and new sexual frames for the field Notes References
18 Teenage pregnancy
Teenage pregnancy: does it result from early sexual initiation? Teenage pregnancy: relational and social contexts Becoming a father, becoming a mother Final remarks Note References
Part IV How to have sex in an epidemic
19 Knowledge, power and HIV/AIDS
The emergence of HIV The ‘scientific response’ and its social impact Transformations in sexuality and impact on stakeholders Epilogue: how to produce knowledge at the crossroads of distinct streams of disciplinary power References
20 Safe sex
Prevention strategies Social aspects of prevention
Practice not behaviour Uses of health information
Conclusions References
21 Exporting moralities
US response to the global epidemic International responses Towards a new consensus? ‘Combination prevention’ References
22 ‘Bareback’ – definitions and identity1
Defining bareback
Lack of condom use Intentionality Awareness of risk Bareback identity
Discussion Note References
23 Sex under the influence of crystal meth
Approach Perceived sexual effects
Hot, horny and not satisfied Better sex or just longer? The multiple meanings of disinhibition Negative sexual side-effects
Discussion References
Part V The choreography of sex
24 Stripping
Note References
25 Flirting, erotic interactions and sexual choreography among urban youth
The hip-hop club The courtship of dancing Establishing and transgressing boundaries The hip-hop scene and young people’s sexuality Notes References
26 Passionate uprisings1
Backdrop to the sexual revolution Methodology Findings Discussion Some possible implications Conclusion Notes References
27 Tourism and the body
Background The seduction of tourism Constructing the marketable fantasy Conclusion: discovering the touristic body Notes References
28 Dancing with daemons
Choreographing computers Notes References
29 Sex in motion
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
Part VI The darker side of sex
30 Sexual and intimate partner violence
Introduction Prevalence
Child sexual abuse Forced first sex Rape and sexual assault Sexual violence in conflict
Trafficking Harmful practices
Causes and consequences of sexual violence
Implications for research and policy Notes References
31 The social production of men’s extramarital sexual practices
Ethnographic context Men’s marital ideals Cultural construction of risk: reputation and public sexual selves Extramarital opportunity structures Social safety and physical risk Implications for prevention Notes References
32 Innocence and scandal
Sex scandals of men in high office Anwar Ibrahim and the sodomy accusations Jacob Zuma and the rape of justice Whose strategies? Media access as power Note References
33 Engaged research on incest in Mexico
Activist research and going back home The invisibility of incest in Mexican research Impressions from the field References
34 Brutal logic1
Making women, taking wives Violence reconstituting heterosexuality Vanishing violence Manhood: brutal by definition Anxious muddlings of sex and violence Attempting to explain the muddle Stuck in the manhood = violence paradigm Socialising homophobia Conclusion Notes References
35 Beyond pseudo-homosexuality
Reigning discourses
Pseudo-homosexuality Corrective rape Transactional sex
Some lived realities Conclusion Notes References
Part VII From sexual health to sexual rights
36 Sexuality education, US federal abstinence policies and young people’s right to health information
Public health and abstinence-only and abstinence-until-marriage policies
Timing of first sex and its importance to health Sexual health, sexuality education and abstinence programmes History of abstinence education in the USA Medical accuracy of abstinence-only curricula Impact of abstinence-only policies on public health programmes Implications of abstinence-only education for sexually active youth and gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and questioning youth
Ethical and human rights perspectives
Young people and human rights The human right to health information Medical ethics and health information
Summary References
37 Bodies and beyond
Note References
38 Political agents or vulnerable victims?
Victims or subjects: the depoliticisation of sexual issues Concluding remarks Notes References
39 Sexuality, identity and citizenship in contemporary Mexico
The case studies
Soldiers dismissed as a result of HIV Women who received legal abortions in Mexico City The Club Gay Amazonas in Tenosique Men and women in sociedades de convivencia (civil partnerships) in Mexico City
Identity, sexuality and rights: subject positions and subjective processes
Sexuality at the intersection of identity and rights Sexuality as irrelevant for the intersection of identity and rights
Notes References
40 From reproductive to sexual rights
Emergence of sexual rights Are sexual rights subsumed under reproductive rights or vice versa? Rights and responsibilities The International Planned Parenthood Federation and sexual rights Conclusion Notes References
41 Sexual rights for young women
Women’s and girls’ sexual rights Young women’s and girls’ sexual rights in the USA: a ‘missing discourse’ Supporting girls’ and young women’s sexual rights in developing countries: ‘rough maps’ to success Conclusion Note References
Part VIII Struggles for erotic justice
42 Reaffirming pleasures in a world of dangers1
Culture vs. political economy Secularity vs. religion Individual vs. community Identity vs. humanity Notes References
43 Law, sexual morality and subversion1
The problem Methods Findings
Evolution of sex work in Uganda The present-day context Of malayas and malaikas … Gender roles and women’s impoverishment Issues of masculinity Victims versus survivors Class differences in sex work Increased market opportunities
Conclusions Notes References
44 Being young and living with HIV
The growth of a rights perspective in defining sexual health Sexual health and the rights of people living with HIV The Brazilian response Young people living with HIV
Lived experiences Lived sexual experience
People living with HIV: sexual health and rights Notes References
45 The ‘queer’ politics of homo(sexuality) and matters of identity
Thinking sex
HIV and AIDS Returning to identity and knowledge
Postscript: returning to the personal Notes References
46 Immigration and LGBT rights in the USA
The challenges of asylum for LGBT immigrants
The problem of subjectivity in asylum decisions
Conclusion Notes References
47 ‘In the life’ in diaspora
Note References
48 Black lesbian gender and sexual culture
The study Methods
Setting Participants and procedures Analyses
Results and discussion
Constructing the dichotomous stud-femme label system
Masculine expression Feminine expression
Debate within the community about lesbian gender
Between the extremes
A radical side to lesbian gender sex roles
Conclusions Notes References
Index
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