ARTICLE Subversive Friendships: Foucault on Homosexuality and
... guidelines for married life, norms that describe male and female roles, rules about how and why to show affection, and so on. Even where a relationship is unusual, as in Foucault’s example of age difference in a marriage relationship, these norms still provide guidance. A homosexual couple, on the o ...
... guidelines for married life, norms that describe male and female roles, rules about how and why to show affection, and so on. Even where a relationship is unusual, as in Foucault’s example of age difference in a marriage relationship, these norms still provide guidance. A homosexual couple, on the o ...
Double Alterity and the Global Historiography of Sexuality: China
... organization. But if one reads the chapters in Gay Life and Culture carefully, one soon realizes that certain underlying methodological assumptions actually unite, rather than differentiate, the two books. Both books essentially approach the global history of sexuality in a way that takes as its poi ...
... organization. But if one reads the chapters in Gay Life and Culture carefully, one soon realizes that certain underlying methodological assumptions actually unite, rather than differentiate, the two books. Both books essentially approach the global history of sexuality in a way that takes as its poi ...
Sexuality and Power in Modern Societies
... is a wide-ranging experience of American men and women and that what we call today sexual diversity was not focused in the behaviours of a handful of individuals but a set of practices that increase in popularity. ...
... is a wide-ranging experience of American men and women and that what we call today sexual diversity was not focused in the behaviours of a handful of individuals but a set of practices that increase in popularity. ...
Making of the Modern World
... Foucault’s Ideas: 1 • He rejected the positivist tenet that the methods of the pure or natural sciences provided an exclusive standard for arriving at genuine or legitimate knowledge. • His critique concentrated instead upon the fundamental point of reference that had grounded and guided inquiry in ...
... Foucault’s Ideas: 1 • He rejected the positivist tenet that the methods of the pure or natural sciences provided an exclusive standard for arriving at genuine or legitimate knowledge. • His critique concentrated instead upon the fundamental point of reference that had grounded and guided inquiry in ...