Erotic Welfare: Sexual Theory and Politics in the Age of EpidemicFirst published in 1993. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company. |
Contents
Editors Introduction | 1 |
Erotic Welfare | 17 |
Authors Introduction | 19 |
Sex and the Logic of Late Capitalism | 34 |
Disciplining Pleasures | 62 |
Regulating Women in the Age of Sexual Epidemic | 83 |
Reproductive Regulations in the Age of Sexual Epidemic | 88 |
Hospitalization and AIDS | 100 |
BodiesPleasuresPowers | 113 |
Rereading Beauvoir | 131 |
Cixous and Foucault on Sexuality and Power | 145 |
Feminist Rereading and Textual Politics | 163 |
Repression AntiSex and the New Film | 177 |
Feminism and Postmodernism | 187 |
199 | |
201 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
AIDS anxiety authority Baby Beauvoir bodies canon circulation Cixous Cixous's commodity consequences construction contemporary context critique cultural custody decision demand desire differential disciplinary discipline disease displaced dominance economy effect emerged epidemic conditions erotic ethical exploitation Fatal Attraction feminine feminism and postmodernism feminist theory figure film forms Foucault freedom function gender hegemony Hélène Cixous hence heterosexual hospital incitement kind language late capitalism liberation limits Linda Singer logic male marriage mechanisms mobilized mother motherhood nuclear family one's operate organized paternity patriarchy phallocentric philosophy pleasure politics of ecstasy pornography position possibilities practices privilege problematic produce profit proliferation prostitution question radical regulation regulatory relationship represented reproductive resistance risk safe sex Sartre sense sexual difference sexual epidemic sexual exchanges sexual political sexual revolution sexually transmitted diseases situation social sphere Stern strategies surrogacy tactics texts threat tion transgression utility Whitehead woman women writing