jayykitty's review against another edition

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4.0

Some sections were difficult to get through but overall this was an informative read. I read this one for a class so I did skip around a bit and it might be an easier read if you go in order. This book is a great overview of American sexuality though, and a precursor to any deep dive you may want to do.

maketeaa's review against another edition

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informative reflective slow-paced

4.75

i've never really considered before how intrinsically linked societal responses to sexuality are with politics, but intimate matters takes a deep dive through it and leaves almost no questions unanswered. beginning with early colonial times, intimate matters traces the sexual norms and behaviours through america, and the way that they vary based on historical contexts. from the times of slavery, to emancipation, to the cornstock laws, one factor remained common between sexual policies -- the maintenance of racial and status gaps through the policing of sexuality, particularly that of women. in its highly detailed, critical analysis, this book casts a spotlight on so many attitudes that still linger in our current society -- for example, why do we still stereotypes about the promiscuity of black women, the aggressive sexuality of black men, and the unconventional formation of black families? why has the journey towards female bodily autonomy been such a long one, that to this day we are still fighting for? intimate matters shows how sexuality has been used to maintain the status quo in a changing society, and the way politicians slowly realised the power of weaponising it to their own benefits -- but what it also shows is that individuals will always fight for their sexual rights, and each revolution catalyses a new era of society that should be embraced for all that it brings.

es_blackwood's review against another edition

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informative reflective slow-paced

4.0

stjohn58's review

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informative reflective slow-paced

5.0

boyish's review

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informative medium-paced

nikkigee81's review

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4.0

A very extensive and well-researched study in human behavior, specifically, sexuality in the United States from the colonial era until the 1980s, just at the time that the spectre of AIDS had loomed its ugly head. Lots of primary sources make this books notes and bibliography section a goldmine for future reading (I scanned some of the pages for myself for later).

balladofreadingqueer's review

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informative fast-paced

5.0

librarianonparade's review

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5.0

Despite getting quite a number of raised eyebrows when people caught sight of me reading this, it's not at all prurient or salacious. It's actually rather fascinating, despite the fact that the title really ought to be (A Mostly Heterosexual) History of Sexuality in America. There is very little in here about asexuality, bisexuality, homosexuality, which are mostly mentioned only in passing or in opposition to the prevailing heterosexual norm. I can understand why, to a certain extent, as the overwhelming majorities of studies to this point have focused on heterosexuality, and the relatively recent rise of gay liberation and the GLBTQ movement has meant that attention is really only now beginning to focus on social studies of homosexuality.

This book charts the evolution of sexuality throughout America's history: from the colonial period, where sex was firmly rooted to reproduction within the context of marriage, men and women had clearly defined and very separates spheres of existence, and the community, church and government took a firm role in regulating people's behaviour; through the nineteenth century, when sex began to take on associations not just with reproduction, but with concepts such as spiritual union, romantic love, emotional satisfaction, and personal identity, still all within the context of marital union, however, and sex began to be commercialised through prostitution and the nacent pornography industry; to the twentieth century, when birth control meant that sex could almost be entirely detached from reproduction, the importance of sex to personal identity and happiness meant that it began to be divorced from the concept of marriage, and the growth of the economy led to the commercialisation of sex and the sexualisation of commerce.

What I found interesting is that the history of sexuality in America is very much a story of evolution and progress all the way up to the twenteith century, when the pendulum of liberalism and conservatism begins to swing back and forth, as one generation reacts to the excesses or prudishness of the other. The 20s were a more permissive era; the 40s and 50s swung back to early marriage, large families and social conservatism; the 1960s moved back to liberalism and social rights movements; the late 1970s and 80s heralded the rise of evangelicalism and conservatism, permeated with interludes of hysteria about homosexuality, AIDS, teen pregnancies and sex education.

Written as it was in the 80s, it would be interesting to see this book updated with a new edition bringing it up to date, as the current era seems to contain both liberalism and conservatism in one, and really highlights the dichotomies and divides that the issue of sexuality seems to generate in America.
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