|
|
US Mall 1 - Sexing the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction of Sexuality

|
List Price: $21.00
Our Price: $11.87
Your Save: $ 9.13 ( 43% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Basic Books
|
Average Customer Rating:     

|
|
Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 155.3 EAN: 9780465077144 ISBN: 0465077145 Label: Basic Books Manufacturer: Basic Books Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 488 Publication Date: 2000-11-22 Publisher: Basic Books Studio: Basic Books
|
|
|
|
|
|
Spotlight customer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Never received due to flood Comment: I didn't receive the book by due date so I emailed the seller and she responded that her basement flooded and could not send the book. I got it somewhere else.
Customer Rating:      Summary: It's lengthy but worthwhile reading Comment: This is an excellent book where the author discusses both the biological and social (environmental) aspects of gender to show the process of how society imprints meaning to our sexual bodies.
Customer Rating:      Summary: sex & gender Comment: Sexing the Body is a thick book, and an important one. The section of footnotes is nearly as long as the text of the book (which can be complicated when reading; I ended up using two bookmarks). That said, it covers the part of the conversation that most of us don't have when we talk about the difference between sex and gender. I have a friend who reads my stuff - she's a feminist, and smart. But whenever I say that we don't really know if there are only two sexes, she always writes "you mean genders here?" in the margin. But no, I mean sex. I mean XX or XY. Or "with penis" or "with clitoris." And that's exactly what Anne Fausto-Sterling covers in this book: how we came to decide that there are two sexes, how (through the times) science came to that standard, and why it's wrong and when it's wrong.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The science of gender Comment: This book is covers the science and politics of gender in a readable language. Fausto-Sterling examines biological experiments on lab animals as well as the history behind our concepts of male and female. She describes gender as an "interaction between small groups of people...[that] involves institutional rules."
It's a well thoughtout book full of useful information to anyone studying gender.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Gender seen from a particular perspective Comment: As a transgendered person who is trying to read as much information as possible about gender, this book does supply alot of historic, scientific and theoretical background. It is another important addition to my library. That being said, I was taken aback by her comments regarding transexuals on pp 253 as a "type of human" and "stereotypical member of their sex to be". If I misunderstood the inference, I apologize. If not, I am greatly offended and wonder why marginalizing my existence supports yours. Read Judith Butler as a comparison to this work.
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Never received due to flood Comment: I didn't receive the book by due date so I emailed the seller and she responded that her basement flooded and could not send the book. I got it somewhere else.
Customer Rating:      Summary: It's lengthy but worthwhile reading Comment: This is an excellent book where the author discusses both the biological and social (environmental) aspects of gender to show the process of how society imprints meaning to our sexual bodies.
Customer Rating:      Summary: sex & gender Comment: Sexing the Body is a thick book, and an important one. The section of footnotes is nearly as long as the text of the book (which can be complicated when reading; I ended up using two bookmarks). That said, it covers the part of the conversation that most of us don't have when we talk about the difference between sex and gender. I have a friend who reads my stuff - she's a feminist, and smart. But whenever I say that we don't really know if there are only two sexes, she always writes "you mean genders here?" in the margin. But no, I mean sex. I mean XX or XY. Or "with penis" or "with clitoris." And that's exactly what Anne Fausto-Sterling covers in this book: how we came to decide that there are two sexes, how (through the times) science came to that standard, and why it's wrong and when it's wrong.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The science of gender Comment: This book is covers the science and politics of gender in a readable language. Fausto-Sterling examines biological experiments on lab animals as well as the history behind our concepts of male and female. She describes gender as an "interaction between small groups of people...[that] involves institutional rules."
It's a well thoughtout book full of useful information to anyone studying gender.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Gender seen from a particular perspective Comment: As a transgendered person who is trying to read as much information as possible about gender, this book does supply alot of historic, scientific and theoretical background. It is another important addition to my library. That being said, I was taken aback by her comments regarding transexuals on pp 253 as a "type of human" and "stereotypical member of their sex to be". If I misunderstood the inference, I apologize. If not, I am greatly offended and wonder why marginalizing my existence supports yours. Read Judith Butler as a comparison to this work.
Array
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|