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Sexual Sources and Influential Erotics
In closely examining such machinations, Cavell and Dickinson use the lenses of family, media, medicine, gender, race, religion, and law to map out how categories of sexual identity have shifted over the years, and how such shifts do not necessarily neatly parallel changes in the arenas of socio-poli...
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Published in: | Canadian literature 2008 (197), p.122 |
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description | In closely examining such machinations, Cavell and Dickinson use the lenses of family, media, medicine, gender, race, religion, and law to map out how categories of sexual identity have shifted over the years, and how such shifts do not necessarily neatly parallel changes in the arenas of socio-political awareness or national policy (to name a few). "Sex and Race" is wonderfully representative, though it, in contrast with the subsequent "Sex and Religion" section, looks like a ghetto; that is to say, the selections for "Sex and Religion" appear to embrace white Christianity and nothing else, while the social makeup of the authors in "Sex and Race" doesn't really appear elsewhere at all. |
format | review |
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"Sex and Race" is wonderfully representative, though it, in contrast with the subsequent "Sex and Religion" section, looks like a ghetto; that is to say, the selections for "Sex and Religion" appear to embrace white Christianity and nothing else, while the social makeup of the authors in "Sex and Race" doesn't really appear elsewhere at all.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0008-4360</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Vancouver: Pacific Affairs. 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"Sex and Race" is wonderfully representative, though it, in contrast with the subsequent "Sex and Religion" section, looks like a ghetto; that is to say, the selections for "Sex and Religion" appear to embrace white Christianity and nothing else, while the social makeup of the authors in "Sex and Race" doesn't really appear elsewhere at all.</abstract><cop>Vancouver</cop><pub>Pacific Affairs. The University of British Columbia</pub></addata></record> |
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subjects | Anthologies Atwood, Margaret (1939- ) Bloom, Harold (1930-2019) Eliot, T S (Thomas Stearns) (1888-1965) Heterosexuality Kristeva, Julia (1941- ) Medicine Munro, Alice Poetry Poets Politics Religion Self concept Yang, Andrew Young, Jean |
title | Sexual Sources and Influential Erotics |
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