Buch, Englisch, 228 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 340 g
Reihe: Women and Psychology
Notes from the Edge
Buch, Englisch, 228 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 340 g
Reihe: Women and Psychology
ISBN: 978-1-138-61408-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Covering a wide variety of subjects and points of inquiry on women's sexuality, from genital anxieties about pubic hair to constructions of the body in the therapy room, this book offers a ground-breaking examination of women, sex, and madness, drawing from psychology, gender and sexuality studies, and cultural studies.
Breanne Fahs argues that women’s sexuality embodies a permanent state of tension between cultural impulses of destruction and selfishness contrasted with the fundamental possibilities of subversiveness and joy. Emphasizing cultural, social, and personal narratives about sexuality, Fahs asks readers to imagine sex, bodies, and madness as intertwined, and to see these narratives as fluid, contested, and changing. With topics as diverse as anarchist visions of sexual freedom, sexualized emotion work, lesbian haunted houses, and the insidious workings of capitalism, Fahs conceptualizes sexuality as a force of regressive moral panics and profound inequalities—deployed in both blatant and more subtle ways onto the body—while also finding hope and resistance in the possibilities of sexuality.
By integrating clinical case studies, cultural studies, qualitative interviews, and original essays, Fahs offers a provocative new vision for sexuality that fuses together social anxieties and cultural madness through a critical feminist psychological approach. Fahs provides an original and accessible volume for students and academics in psychology, gender and sexuality studies, and cultural studies.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction: mad women, precarity, and the possibilities of sex
Part 1 Women explain things to me
1 Men, through women’s eyes
2 The other third shift? Women’s emotion work in their sexual relationships
3 Slippery desire: women’s qualitative accounts of their vaginal lubrication and wetness
Part 2 Veering and queering
4 Killjoy’s Kastle and the hauntings of queer/lesbian feminism
5 The politics of turning rape into “nonconsensual sex”
6 Genital anxieties: using critical sexuality studies to examine women’s attitudes about the vulva and vagina
Part 3 On the couch
7 Compulsory penetration? A sex therapy romp
8 Are women people? The lusty and chaotic world of sex addiction
9 Therapy without bodies, or why fleshiness matters
Part 4 All riled up
10 Warning: capitalism is destroying our sex lives
11 “Freedom to” and “freedom from”: a new vision for sex-positive politics
12 Counter-erotics: sex as a form of resistance
Acknowledgements
Index