Intimate Citizenship: Private Decisions and Public DialoguesSolo parenting, in vitro fertilization, surrogate mothers, gay and lesbian families, cloning and the prospect of designer babies, Viagra and the morning-after pill, HIV/AIDS, the global porn industry, on-line dating services, virtual sex--whether for better of worse, our intimate lives are in the throes of dramatic change. In this thought-provoking study, sociologist Ken Plummer examines the transformations taking place in the realm of intimacy and the conflicts--the intimate troubles --to which these changes constantly give rise. In surveying the intimate possibilities now available to us and the issues swirling around them, Plummer focuses especially on the overlap of public and private. Increasingly, our most private decisions are bound up with public institutions such as legal codes, the medical system, or the media. What impact does the increasingly public character of personal life have on our sense of ourselves and on how we view our own intimate choices? To navigate our way through a world in which people s private lives are so often subject to public scrutiny and debate, and in which the public sphere is increasingly pluralized and contested, we must broaden our understanding of what it means to be a citizen. Through the idea of "intimate citizenship," Plummer sets an important agenda for the years to come. |
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To watch a TV talk show such as Oprah or Jerry Springer is to sense a
proliferation of anxieties and a newfound fascination with the interior life. Here in
the public domain of television, day after day the personal problems of late
modernity are ...
And some have yet even to enter the modern world. At the other ... Late modern (
or postmodern) intimacies incorporate the latter stages of the above, with newer
possibilities grafted onto the old in a high-tech global world. We are just “on the ...
Of course, change is a feature of all societies, but I have been hinting that the
changes the late modern world is experiencing are having striking consequences
for the intimate life. The examples I provided at the start of this chapter to some ...
should we conduct our personal life in a late modern world, a life that can
embrace aspects of tradition, the modern, and the postmodern? How can we find
some sense of the universal, however limited, among all the pluralization,
polyvocality, ...
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Contents
3 | |
17 | |
3 Culture Wars and Contested Intimacies | 33 |
4 The New Theories of Citizenship | 49 |
5 Public Intimacies Private Citizens | 67 |
6 Dialogic Citizenship | 84 |
7 Stories and the Grounded Moralities of Everyday Life | 95 |
8 Globalizing Intimate Citizenship | 117 |
9 The Intimate Citizenship Project | 139 |
Notes | 147 |
Bibliography | 163 |
Index of Names | 179 |
Subject Index | 183 |