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This book demonstrates the centrality of sex, gender, and sexuality
to theories of human behaviors and practices.
Offers readings from all four subfields of anthropology:
cultural, biological, linguistic, and archaeological (along with
historical and applied anthropology).
Includes discussion of biotechnology and bioethics, health and
illness, language, ethnicity, identity, politics, post-colonialism,
kinship, development, and policymaking.
Auteur
Jennifer Robertson is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Michigan. She has published many articles and book chapters (in several languages) on a wide spectrum of subjects and is the author of Native and Newcomer: Making and Unmaking a Japanese City (1991) and Takarazuka: Sexual Politics and Popular Culture in Modern Japan (2001 [1998]; Japanese translation 2000). The author's primary area specialty is Japan however she has also worked in Sri Lanka and is presently working in Israel.
Texte du rabat
Same-Sex Cultures and Sexualities: An Anthropological Reader demonstrates the centrality of the complicated relationship of sex, gender, and sexuality to theories of human behaviors and practices. Although heterosexuality has been interrogated and demystified, it retains normative dominance. By drawing on the multiple fresh and illuminating perspectives of anthropology, this landmark collection moves beyond other lesbian and gay studies readers by presenting a broader view of the significance of studying same-sex cultures and sexualities by presenting the lives of a range of individuals across cultural and temporal domains.
Same-Sex Cultures and Sexualities offers readings from all four subfields of anthropology: cultural, biological, linguistic, and archaeological (along with historical and applied anthropology), and includes discussion of biotechnology and bioethics, health and illness, language, ethnicity, identity, politics, post/colonialism, kinship, development, and policymaking.
Résumé
This book demonstrates the centrality of sex, gender, and sexuality to theories of human behaviors and practices.
Moves beyond other lesbian and gay studies readers by presenting a broader view of the significance of studying same-sex cultures and sexualities across cultures.
Offers readings from all four subfields of anthropology: cultural, biological, linguistic, and archaeological (along with historical and applied anthropology).
Includes discussion of biotechnology and bioethics, health and illness, language, ethnicity, identity, politics, post-colonialism, kinship, development, and policymaking.
Contenu
Introduction: Sexualizing anthropology's fields (Jennifer Robertson).
Part 1: Anthropology's Sexual Fields.
Anthropology rediscovers sexuality: A theoretical comment. (Carole Vance).
Biological determinism and homosexuality. (Bonnie Spanier).
Feminisms, queer theories, and the archaeological study of past sexualities. (Barbara Voss).
No. (Don Kulick).
Resources for lesbian ethnographic research in the lavender archives. (Alisa Klinger).
Part 2: Problems and Propositions.
Erotic anthropology: 'ritualized homosexuality' in Melanesia and beyond. (Deborah Elliston).
Gender, genetics, and generation: reformulating biology in lesbian kinship. (Corinne Hayden).
Transsexualism: reflections on the persistence of gender and the mutability of sex. (Judith Shapiro).
Problems encountered in writing the history of sexuality: Sources, theory and interpretation. (Estelle B. Freedman and John D'Emilio).
Part 3: Ethics, Erotics and Exercises .
Choosing the sexual orientation of children. (Edward Stein).
Yoshiya Nobuko: Out and outspoken in practice and prose. (Jennifer Robertson).
Outing as performance/outing as resistance: a queer reading of Austrian (homo)sexualities. (Matti Bunzl).
Tombois in West Sumatra: constructing masculinity and erotic desire. (Evelyn Blackwood).
Freeing South Africa: the 'modernization' of male-male sexuality in Soweto. (Donald Donham).
Gay organizations, NGOs, and the globalization of sexual identity: the case of Bolivia. (Timothy Wright).