ISBN:
9780857453730
,
1282255606
,
9780857453747
,
9780857459374
Language:
English
Pages:
310 p
Edition:
Online-Ausg. 2011 Available via World Wide Web
Series Statement:
Spektrum (New York, N.Y.) v. 5
Parallel Title:
Druckausg. After the history of sexuality
DDC:
306.76/609430904
Keywords:
Electronic books
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Deutschland
;
Homosexualität
;
Geschichte 1900-1972
;
Deutschland
;
Sexualverhalten
;
Sexualnorm
;
Geschichte
;
Deutschland
;
Sexualität
;
Geschlechtsidentität
;
Geschichte
Abstract:
Includes bibliographical references and index
Abstract:
Michel Foucault's seminal The History of Sexuality (1976–1984) has since its publication provided a context for the emergence of critical historical studies of sexuality. This collection reassesses the state of the historiography on sexuality—a field in which the German case has been traditionally central. In many diverse ways, the Foucauldian intervention has governed the formation of questions in the field as well as the assumptions about how some of these questions should be answered. It can be argued, however, that some of these revolutionary insights have ossified into dogmas
Description / Table of Contents:
Contents; Figures; Introduction - After the History of Sexuality? Periodicities, Subjectivities, Ethics; Section I - When Was Sexuality? Rethinking Periodization; Chapter 1 - After the History of (Male) Homosexuality; Chapter 2 - Sexual Identity and Other Aspects of ""Modern"" Sexuality: New Chronologies, Same Old Problem?; Chapter 3 - Interior States and Sexuality in Early Modern Germany; Chapter 4 - Saying It with Flowers: Post-Foucauldian Literary History and the Poetics of Taboo in a Premodern German Love Song (Walther von der Vogelweide's ""Lindenlied"")
Description / Table of Contents:
Chapter 5 - Early Nineteenth-Century Sexual Radicalism: Heinrich Hössli and the Liberals of His DaySection II - Whose Sexuality? Subjectivity, Surveillance, Emancipation; Chapter 6 - Anna Rüling, Michel Foucault, and the ""Tactical Polyvalance"" of the Female Homosexual; Chapter 7 - To Police and Protect: The Surveillance of Homosexuality in Imperial Berlin; Chapter 8 - Soliciting Fantasies: Knowing and Not Knowing about Male Prostitution by Soldiers in Imperial Germany
Description / Table of Contents:
Chapter 9 - Between Normalization and Resistance: Prostitutes' Professional Identities and Political Organization in Weimar GermanyChapter 10 - Writing Love, Feeling Shame: Rethinking Respectability in the Weimar Homosexual Women's Movement; Chapter 11 - Transsexual: Herculine Barbin Meets ""Liebe Marta""; Section III - The Politics of Sexual Ethics; Chapter 12 - Beyond Freedom: A Return to Subjectivity in the History of Sexuality; Chapter 13 - Homosexuality in the Sexual Ethics of the 1930s: A Values Debate in the Culture Wars between Conservatism, Liberalism, and Moral-National Renewal
Description / Table of Contents:
Chapter 14 - Socialist Eugenics and Homosexuality in the GDR: The Case of Günter DörnerChapter 15 - Sex, Sentiment, and Socialism: Relationship Counseling in the GDR in the Wake of the 1965 Family Law Code; Chapter 16 - Longing, Lust, Violence, Liberation: Discourses on Sexuality on the Radical Left in West Germany, 1969-1972; Postscript - Tomorrow Sex Will Be Good Again; Select Bibliography; Contributors; Index
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
,
Available via World Wide Web
URL:
Volltext
(URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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