Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud

TitleMaking Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication1990
AuthorsLaqueur, Thomas
Number of Pages313
PublisherHarvard University Press
CityCambridge, MA
Abstract

This is a book about the making and unmaking of sex over the centuries. It tells the astonishing story of sex in the West from the ancients to the moderns in a precise account of developments in reproductive anatomy and physiology. We cannot fail to recognize the players in Thomas Laqueur's story--the human sexual organs and pleasures, food, blood, semen, egg, sperm--but we will be amazed at the plots into which they have been woven by scientists, political activists, literary figures, and theorists of every stripe. Laqueur begins with the question of why, in the late eighteenth century, woman's orgasm came to be regarded as irrelevant to conception, and he then proceeds to retrace the dramatic changes in Western views of sexual characteristics over two millennia. Along the way, two "masterplots" emerge. The two plots overlap; neither ever holds a monopoly. Science may establish many new facts, but even so, Laqueur argues, science was only providing a new way of speaking, a rhetoric and not a key to female liberation or to social progress. Making Sex ends with turning Freud's famous dictum around, as Laqueur posits that destiny is anatomy. Sex, in other words, is an artifice. 

URLhttps://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674543553
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21375348

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