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Feminism and Sexuality: A Reader

Columbia University Press (1996)

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  1. The Sexual Body as a Meaningful Home: Making Sense of Sexual Concordance.Rita Niineste - 2021 - Open Philosophy 4 (1):269-283.
    The past 20–30 years have provided plenty of new empirical data on women’s sexuality, a topic often theorised as puzzling and unexplainable. In recent discussions, a controversial issue has been the phenomenon of sexual concordance, i.e. the correlation between the self-reported, subjective assessment of one’s sexual arousal and the simultaneous bodily response measured directly on the genitals. In laboratory-based assessments, sexual concordance has been observed to be on average substantially lower in women than in men, although the reasons for the (...)
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  • Whose Body Matters? Feminist Sociology and the Corporeal Turn in Sociology and Feminism.Anne Witz - 2000 - Body and Society 6 (2):1-24.
    This article proposes that the urgent task for feminist sociology is to recuperate those lost or residual `body matters' which lurk, unattended to, on the sidelines of the social. Feminist sociology must carefully negotiate the complex space between sociality and corporeality. The new feminist philosophies of the body tend sometimes to grate against this project by valorizing the body but de-valorizing gender. The new sociology of the body is recuperating the body within sociology, but pays insufficient attention to the ways (...)
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  • Depicted rapes: How similar are vignette and newspaper accounts of rape?Irina Anderson & Geoffrey Beattie - 2001 - Semiotica 2001 (137):1-21.
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  • The Value of Relationships: Affective Scenes and Emotional Performances. [REVIEW]Beverley Skeggs - 2010 - Feminist Legal Studies 18 (1):29-51.
    Many theorists have charted for some time how capital extends its lines of flight into new spaces, creating new markets by harnessing affect and intervening in intimate, emotional and domestic relationships, and into bio-politics more generally. Feminists have known for a long time that women’s ‘domestic’ labour has been central to the reproduction of capital but that it has been made invisible, surplus and naturalised and is rarely taken into account in theories of value. Yet we are now in a (...)
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