The history of sexuality

Michel Foucault

Book - 1988

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306.7/Foucault v. 1
vol. 1: 0 / 1 copies available
vol. 2: 0 / 1 copies available
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2nd Floor 306.7/Foucault v. 1 Due Oct 31, 2024
2nd Floor 306.7/Foucault v. 2 Due Oct 31, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Vintage Books 1988-1990.
Language
English
French
Main Author
Michel Foucault (author)
Other Authors
Robert Hurley (translator)
Edition
Vintage Books ed
Item Description
Translation of Histoire de la sexualité.
Physical Description
3 volumes ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
ISBN
9780679724698
9780394751221
9780394741550
  • v. 1. An introduction
  • v. 2. The use of pleasure
  • v. 3. The care of the self.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Fascinating but ferociously abstract speculations on the modern obsession with sex by the redoubtable author of Madness and Civilization. Foucault claims that the past three centuries have witnessed a ""great process of transforming sex into discourse""--an explosion of medical, moral, psychiatric, and literary talk about sexuality, In the wake of the Sexual Revolution much of this discourse seems repressive and morbid, but Foucault sees the policies of doctors, parents, educators, and pastors of, say, the late 19th century, as strategies for creating zones of pleasure and power (and hence akin to our quest for a sexual Utopia). In defining the realm of the forbidden and the abnormal they gave it a new, substantive existence, which they attempted to control and exploit. Foucault lists four key mechanisms of this approach: the ""hysterization of women's bodies""--treating women as mere functions of an all-powerful and often pathological sexual energy; the ""pedagogization of children's sex""--the war against masturbation and other efforts to suppress sexual activity in the young; the ""socialization of procreative behavior""--state interference in human fertility, attacks on contraception, etc.; and the ""psychiatrization of perverse pleasure""--diagnosing and curing sexual ""anomalies."" One can quarrel with Foucault on many grounds: his uncouth neologisms (bravely handled in a fine translation); his refusal to annotate or give examples, except here and there, for his vast generalizations; his sometimes maddening flight from the obvious (as when he says that sex must not be described as a stubborn drive). But the provocative brilliance of his thought remains. Whether or not subsequent volumes clear up its rarefied complexities, this is a book that philosophers and social scientists are going to have to read--whether they like it or not. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.