Revisions: Gender and Sexuality in Late ModernityOpen University Press, 2002 - 152 pages This 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 40
... sense Dean's analysis makes feminist communities clear contenders to be understood as the sort of reflexive communities defined by Lash : one is not born into them but throws oneself into them ; they may be stretched over abstract space ...
... sense Dean's analysis makes feminist communities clear contenders to be understood as the sort of reflexive communities defined by Lash : one is not born into them but throws oneself into them ; they may be stretched over abstract space ...
Page 41
... sense that one does not choose to join them but is thrown into them , they are reflexive in two senses . First , he suggests , as diasporic , there is a ' sort of " mobile " being in the world , which lends to it a certain mediation in ...
... sense that one does not choose to join them but is thrown into them , they are reflexive in two senses . First , he suggests , as diasporic , there is a ' sort of " mobile " being in the world , which lends to it a certain mediation in ...
Page 112
... senses , subject to domin- ant medico - moral and medico - scientific discourses on AIDS and HIV , they do draw on counter - discourses in making personal sense of the virus and syndrome , and do not accept dominant meanings ...
... senses , subject to domin- ant medico - moral and medico - scientific discourses on AIDS and HIV , they do draw on counter - discourses in making personal sense of the virus and syndrome , and do not accept dominant meanings ...
Contents
new sociological directions and feminist sociological controversies | 13 |
the aestheticization of everyday life | 21 |
merely cultural | 27 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Adkins aesthetic reflexivity aestheticization aestheticization of everyday analyses of reflexivity Bourdieu Butler concern constitution of gender consumer culture contemporary context critique cultural economy cultural feminization detraditionalization difference discussion especially example Featherstone Felski femininity feminist flexible Fraser gender and sexuality gender identity habitus Hennessy hermeneutic heterosexual hierarchy highlight historicization HIV antibody testing HIV testing homosexual immanent increasingly individualization instance involves issue knower Lash Lash's analysis late modernity Lupton Lury masculinity McDowell McNay mobile relation mobility and reflexivity mobility and risk neo-liberal particular performances politics post social structure post-structural practices processes queer queer theory question reconfiguration referential reflexive modernization thesis reflexive relation reflexivity and mobility reflexivity in relation relation to gender risk society self-conscious self-reflexivity sexuality and gender sexuality post social significance social research social science sociologies of gender speaking position Specifically suggests surveillance medicine take-up techniques terms of gender theories of reflexive tion understood Waldby women workers workplace