Long Slow Burn: Sexuality and Social Science

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Author: Kath Weston

ISBN-10: 0415920434

ISBN-13: 9780415920438

Category: Gay and lesbian studies

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The last decade has seen the transformation of the study of sexuality from a marginalized effort to a fully respected discipline at many major universities. There are numerous publications devoted solely to the topic and queer theory, a force to be reckoned with, has its own celebrities. Nonetheless, queer studies is considered to be the brainchild of the humanities, with the social sciences slowly coming around to apply its principles to empirical research. Long, Slow Burn, a powerful collection of essays by Kath Weston, argues that social science has been talking about sex all along; to deny this one would have to overlook Kinsey's pioneering sex research in the 1950s, or the psychiatrist Evelyn Hooker's pathbreaking study of homosexuality, but also in the "sex talk" that lies at the heart of classic debates on kinship, inequality, cognition, and other foundational topics in the social sciences. What is different now, Weston claims, is the way sexuality has been isolated from other contemporary issues. Long, Slow Burn lays out a radically different approach to the study of sexuality. Not content with its ghettoization as a contained subfield, Weston refuses to draw an artificial line around sexuality. Her essays do not attempt to make sexuality a discrete object of study. Rather, each essay "sexes up" a conventional subject, such as kinship, race or labor, proving that once you start paying attention to sexuality, you can never look at social issues in the same way again. Long, Slow Burn offers an intervention, an attempt to see sexuality as it permeates the multiple fibers of our social fabric. It demonstrates that sexuality has always been a part of the social sciences, but more importantly, is the key to their future. Lambda Book Report ...highly readable....This is an exceptionally good read, even for the academically uninitiated and the theoretically wary.

the bubble, the burn, and the simmer: introduction: locating sexuality in social science11get thee to a big city: sexual imaginary and the great gay migration292forever is a long time: romancing the real in gay kinship ideologies573made to order: family formation and the rhetoric of choice834production as means, production as metaphor: women's struggle to enter the trades955sexuality, class, and conflict in a lesbian workplace1156theory, theory, who's got the theory? or, why i'm tired of that tired debate1437lesbian/gay studies in the house of anthropology1478requiem for a street fighter1779the virtual anthropologist189notes213references229permissions257index259