Revisions: Gender and Sexuality in Late ModernityThis volume brings together recent sociology of late modernity, particularly sociologies of reflexivity, aesthetics and detraditionalization, with a consideration of transformations of identity, especially transformations of gender and sexual identities. It does so in relation to questions of cultural economy; debates over the role and place of reflexivity in the social sciences; recent controversies over the significance of commodity aesthetics in regard to questions of identity; and debates on the significance of risk for the organization of contemporary sexualities. In so doing it puts forward a distinctive thesis, namely that within late modernity gender and sexuality are being reworked in terms of categories of reflexivity and risk. It shows that this reworking places increasing significance on issues of mobility and identity in late modernity. It therefore outlines the politics of mobility in regard to identity, suggesting that mobility is an important but often neglected source of power in late modernity. |
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Page 110
Lupton , for instance , has argued that discourses of health risk and diagnostic testing , such as HIV antibody testing , ' are highly interrelated ' ( 1995 : 104 ) since the logics of testing involve the identification of those defined ...
Lupton , for instance , has argued that discourses of health risk and diagnostic testing , such as HIV antibody testing , ' are highly interrelated ' ( 1995 : 104 ) since the logics of testing involve the identification of those defined ...
Page 117
of sexualities defined and articulated in terms of categories of risk , neoliberal techniques of governance in relation to HIV / AIDS may be disruptive of the heterosexual - homosexual binary via an extension of a micropolitics of self ...
of sexualities defined and articulated in terms of categories of risk , neoliberal techniques of governance in relation to HIV / AIDS may be disruptive of the heterosexual - homosexual binary via an extension of a micropolitics of self ...
Page 120
Specifically , it suggests that , through the practice and techniques of testing , heterosexuality is defined as a self - reflexive identity , that is , as self - managing and self - regulating , while other sexual identities ...
Specifically , it suggests that , through the practice and techniques of testing , heterosexuality is defined as a self - reflexive identity , that is , as self - managing and self - regulating , while other sexual identities ...
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Contents
new sociological directions and feminist sociological controversies | 13 |
reflexivity and mobility in social theory | 30 |
gender embodiment and reflexivity | 42 |
Copyright | |
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aesthetic aestheticization analysis appears argues arguments aspects associated assumed assumption attention authority Beck become body Bourdieu central chapter claims concern consider constituted consumer contemporary context CRUZ cultural defined detraditionalization difference discussion economy emergence especially example Felski femininity feminist feminization fields flexible forms gender and sexuality Hennessy heterosexual hierarchy highlight HIV testing idea identity important increasing increasingly individualization instance involves issue kind knowledge labour Lash Lash's late modernity limits linked logic Lupton masculinity matter McDowell McNay mean mobility modes Moreover moves notes notion organization particular performances politics positions possible post social structure practices processes queer question recent reflexive modernization thesis regard relation to gender respondents risk seems self-reflexivity shifts significance simply society sociology Specifically stance suggests techniques theory tion traditional transformation turn understanding understood University University Library women workers workplace