Journal articles on the topic 'Sexual subjectivity'

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1

Schalet, Amy. "Sexual Subjectivity Revisited." Gender & Society 24, no. 3 (May 21, 2010): 304–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0891243210368400.

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Nekic, M., A. Boskovic, and I. Tucak Junakovic. "Is Sexual Subjectivity Necessary for Marital Satisfaction?" Klinička psihologija 9, no. 1 (June 13, 2016): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.21465/2016-kp-op-0058.

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Objective: Sexual subjectivity includes perception of sexual pleasure and personal sexuality and represents an important part of self-concept (sexual bodyesteem, self-entitlement to sexual desire and self-pleasure, entitlement to sexual pleasure from a partner, self-efficacy in achieving sexual pleasure, and sexual selfreflection). According to previous studies, which have been only done on female adolescents and emerging adults (developmental stage between adolescence and young adulthood), sexual subjectivity was associated with lower levels of sexual anxiety and higher levels of sexual health. It was hypothesized that elements of sexual subjectivity, as an important part of self-concept would be a significant predictor of marital satisfaction. Design and Method: Participants were 83 married couples, average age 30,5 years old. They were 4,3 years in marriage, and 72% of them had at least one child. Marital satisfaction scale (Cubela Adoric & Jurevic, 2006) and Sexual subjectivity scale (Horne & Zimmer-Gembeck, 2006; Croatian adaptation, Nekic, 2011) were used as measures. Results: The results showed that couples without children had higher marital satisfaction, and possessed higher sexual subjectivity. Self-entitlement to sexual desire and self-pleasure was significantly higher in male participants. Entitlement to sexual pleasure from a partner was the only significant predictor for female marital satisfaction, while sexual body-esteem, self-efficacy in achieving sexual pleasure, and sexual self-reflection were significant predictors for male marital satisfaction. Conclusions: Sexual subjectivity is an important construct for marital couples not just for female adolescents and emerging adults. We found that sexual subjectivity is important and significant predictor for female and male marital satisfaction.
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Sheff, Elisabeth. "Polyamorous Women, Sexual Subjectivity and Power." Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 34, no. 3 (June 2005): 251–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0891241604274263.

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Howe, Cymene. "Sexual adjudications and queer transpositions." Journal of Language and Sexuality 3, no. 1 (March 10, 2014): 136–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jls.3.1.07how.

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Each of the articles included in this special issue of the Journal of Language and Sexuality asks us to imagine queer im/migration, asylum and sexual citizenship in multiple dimensions and to probe the discursive operations that establish the parameters of sexual subjectivity. This review article argues that these processes are illustrative of “sexual adjudication:” the discursive coordinates, legal logics and linguistic sensibilities that produce the category of the sexual migrant, the sexual refugee and the sexual asylum seeker. The discussions featured here engage questions of how sexual epistemics work in both sending and receiving countries, as well as the role of borders in constituting narratives of sexual subjectivity. In addition to analyzing the theoretical overlaps and reciprocal conversations between the articles included in the special issue, this essay provides a historical, comparative context by situating these discussions within larger theoretical and terminological questions regarding queer im/migration, asylum and subjectivity.
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Kim, Yun-Hee, and Gyoo-Yeong Cho. "Effects of Sexual Autonomy, Sexual Assertiveness, Sexual Subjectivity on Sexual Behaviors among University Students." Journal of Fisheries and Marine Sciences Education 26, no. 6 (December 31, 2014): 1332–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.13000/jfmse.2014.26.6.1332.

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6

Lucumí Moreno, Eva María. "Una mirada a las formas de subjetividad en mujeres víctimas de violencia sexual en el contexto de Buenaventura." La Manzana de la Discordia 7, no. 2 (March 29, 2016): 55. http://dx.doi.org/10.25100/lamanzanadeladiscordia.v7i2.1562.

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Resumen: Este artículo presenta resultados de unainvestigación acerca de las formas de subjetividad presentesen tres mujeres negras víctimas de violencia sexualen el contexto del municipio de Buenaventura, Valledel Cauca. El presente estudio feminista posiciona a lasmujeres como sujetos enunciantes de sentidos y reflexionasobre la violencia sexual. Los hallazgos apuntan aidentificar tendencias y singularidades que surgen enlos discursos de las mujeres a partir de la experienciade violencia sexual vivida. Los resultados y la discusiónemanan de algunos de los núcleos interpretativos, queemergen en la investigación como las manifestacionesdel poder patriarcal, los sentimientos, la reinterpretacióndel cuerpo a partir de la experiencia y la resistenciaal contexto, caracterizado por la presencia del conflictoarmado. A partir de estas vivencias las mujeres reinterpretanlas relaciones que establecen con los otros y consus cuerpos. En ellas prevalecen sentimientos de culpa,temor y resistencia.Palabras clave: género, subjetividad, narrativas, mujeres,violencia sexual.A Look at Forms of Subjectivity of Women Victimsof Violence in BuenaventuraAbstract: This paper presents results of research onthe forms of subjectivity present in three black womenvictims of sexual violence in the context of the municipalityof Buenaventura, Valle del Cauca. In this feministstudy women are presented as subjects of enunciationand there is a reflection on sexual violence. The findingspoint to identifying both trends and peculiarities that canbe seen in women’s discourse due to the experience ofsexual violence. Results and discussion arise from someinterpretive nuclei, stemming from research on certainmanifestations of patriarchal power, feelings, the reinterpretationof the body from experience, and resistanceto the social context, characterized by the presence ofarmed conflict. From these experiences, women reinterpretrelationships with others and with their bodies.Feelings of guilt, fear and resistance prevail.Keywords: gender, subjectivity, narratives, women,sexual violence.
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7

Taylor, Dianna. "Non-Subjective Assemblages? Foucault, Subjectivity, and Sexual Violence." SubStance 46, no. 1 (2017): 38–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.3368/ss.46.1.38.

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Taylor, Dianna. "Non-Subjective Assemblages?: Foucault, Subjectivity, and Sexual Violence." SubStance 46, no. 1 (2017): 38–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/sub.2017.0002.

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9

Weiss, Allen S. ""Poetic Justice": Formations of Subjectivity and Sexual Identity." Cinema Journal 28, no. 1 (1988): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1225016.

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Simonsson, Angelica, and Petra Angervall. "Girls’ sexual subjectivity in a secondary language classroom." Gender and Language 12, no. 2 (January 28, 2017): 218–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1558/genl.31614.

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11

Hlavka, Heather R. "Legal Subjectivity Among Youth Victims of Sexual Abuse." Law & Social Inquiry 39, no. 01 (2014): 31–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/lsi.12032.

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How do youth experience and understand the law? How is law regarded and communicated? Youth's legal subjectivity has received limited attention in the sociological and legal literatures, especially as it relates to crime‐reporting behaviors. Drawing on legal socialization theory and procedural justice, I show how youth, as legal subjects, described the law and how those descriptions differed by social location. Using a diverse sample, I examined narratives produced during forensic interviews following reports of sexual victimization. Rather than passive victims, youth act on, and within, institutions. In their own words, youth describe experiences with state systems that animated their understandings of law and criminal justice processes. They reveal how shared frameworks of understanding affected legal subjectivity, shaped their evaluations of the law, and influenced participation in state systems so that perhaps those most in need of legal remedy are those most unlikely to seek it.
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Carlson, S. T. "Transgender Subjectivity and the Logic of Sexual Difference." differences 21, no. 2 (January 1, 2010): 46–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10407391-2010-003.

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Bovill, Helen, Richard Waller, and Kieran McCartan. "Discussing Atypical Sexual Harassment as a Controversial Issue in Bystander Programmes: One UK Campus Study." Sexuality & Culture 24, no. 5 (December 14, 2019): 1252–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12119-019-09682-8.

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AbstractThis research emanates from an anti-sexual violence bystander programme delivered at an English university. Fifteen students were identified through purposive and convenience sampling to take part in focus groups. Discussions emerged regarding atypical sexual harassment. There is a gap in the literature exploring sexual harassment outside of the male perpetrator and female victim narrative which this paper contributes to. This paper considers four conversational themes: ‘unwanted touching: women to men’, ‘sexual banter: women to men’, ‘sexual stereotypes: women and men’, and ‘developing stronger ethical subjectivity’. This paper recognises most sexual harassment occurs from men to women, and acknowledges criticism of focussing otherwise when resources are limited, noting this risks obscuring the enduring power differentials between the sexes. It contends that exploring a controversial issue, such as male experience of sexual harassment, might help bystander programmes by developing ethical subjectivity in undergraduate students. Exploring sexual behaviour as a spectrum may lead to counter hegemonic discourses to emerge.
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Waller, Emily. "Gender Constitution and Reversible Potentiality: The Making of the Masculine Subject in Longus’s Daphnis and Chloe." differences 33, no. 1 (May 1, 2022): 92–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10407391-9735470.

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This study places Longus’s Daphnis and Chloe in dialogue with Foucault and Freud, arguing that within the liminality of adolescence, the formation of gendered subjectivity is a condition of “reversible potentiality” in which any given act of the subject represents the radical potential for the subject to be acted upon. Seeking to disrupt the presumptive equivalence between masculine subjectivity and knowledge/power, the author turns to Lycaeneion’s education of Daphnis as a case study in male subject formation. Here, knowledge functions as a force of immobilization rather than empowerment. If Daphnis’s psychosomatic identification with feminine sexuality is understood as a symptom of male sexual development in pederastic culture, then the Freudian female Oedipus complex can be reimagined as descriptive of the boy’s progression out of sexual objectification and into the role of active sexual pursuer, a stage through which boys in pederastic culture must pass on their way to adult male subjectivity.
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15

Horne, Sharon, and Melanie J. Zimmer-Gembeck. "Female sexual subjectivity and well-being: Comparing late adolescents with different sexual experiences." Sexuality Research and Social Policy 2, no. 3 (September 2005): 25–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/srsp.2005.2.3.25.

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16

Angelides, Steven. "The ‘Second Sexual Revolution’, Moral Panic, and the Evasion of Teenage Sexual Subjectivity." Women's History Review 21, no. 5 (November 2012): 831–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2012.658169.

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Jarkovská, Lucie, and Sharon Lamb. "Between Innocence and Sexual Subjectivity: Childhood, Adolescence, and Sexualities." Gender a výzkum / Gender and Research 22, no. 2 (January 18, 2022): 3–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.13060/gav.2021.016.

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18

Wollan, Gjermund. "Making Place, Making Self: Travel, Subjectivity and Sexual Difference." Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography 64, no. 4 (December 2010): 218. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00291951.2010.528614.

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19

Satinsky, Sonya, and Kristen N. Jozkowski. "Female Sexual Subjectivity and Verbal Consent to Receiving Oral Sex." Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy 41, no. 4 (June 18, 2014): 413–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0092623x.2014.918065.

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20

Angelo, Adrienne. "Sexual Cartographies: Mapping Subjectivity in the Cinema of Catherine Breillat." Journal for Cultural Research 14, no. 1 (January 2010): 43–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14797580903363082.

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21

Ussher, Jane M., and Julie Mooney-Somers. "Negotiating Desire and Sexual Subjectivity: Narratives of Young Lesbian Avengers." Sexualities 3, no. 2 (May 2000): 183–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/136346000003002005.

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22

Carmody, Moira. "Young Men, Sexual Ethics and Sexual Negotiation." Sociological Research Online 18, no. 2 (May 2013): 90–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.5153/sro.2932.

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This paper explores a research and education project seeking positive ways to engage young men in respectful and ethical negotiation within sexual relationships. The experiences of young men aged 16–25 years of age are explored who took part in the Sex & Ethics Violence Prevention Program which was developed in 2006 and continues to be run in several Australian states and in New Zealand. The Program was designed to assist both young women and men to develop enhanced ethical sexual subjectivity and in the process help them to explore diverse gender possibilities in their intimate relationships. This study is located within the international field of violence prevention education. It considers how the young men who took part in this Program between 2009–2011 responded to the opportunity to reflect on their practices within the context of casual and ongoing sexual relationships. The implications of the study for our understandings of masculinities and gender are explored and how sexual ethics may provide a useful approach to assist young people as they navigate their sexual lives.
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Delgado Huitrón, Cynthia Citlallin. "The political imaginary of sexual freedom: subjectivity and power in the new sexual democratic turn." Women & Performance: a journal of feminist theory 28, no. 2 (May 4, 2018): 173–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0740770x.2018.1473987.

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24

Pavin, Lucija, Marina Nekic, and Ivana Tucak Junakovic. "Women's Sexual Satisfaction in Long-Term Relationships: The Role of Sexual Subjectivity, Pornography and Intimacy." Journal of Sexual Medicine 14, no. 5 (May 2017): e250. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.04.240.

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Zimmer-Gembeck, Melanie J., Wendy H. Ducat, and Marie-Aude Boislard-Pepin. "A Prospective Study of Young Females’ Sexual Subjectivity: Associations with Age, Sexual Behavior, and Dating." Archives of Sexual Behavior 40, no. 5 (April 14, 2011): 927–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-011-9751-3.

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26

David, Mirela. "Hooligan Sparrow: Representation of sexual assault in Chinese cinema, feminist activism and the limits of #MeToo in China." Asian Cinema 32, no. 1 (April 1, 2021): 55–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ac_00033_1.

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Hooligan Sparrow breaks with many taboos in Chinese cinema. It is the first internationally acclaimed documentary by a Chinese female director to centre upon investigating the activities of Ye Haiyan, a Chinese sex and women’s rights activist, as well as to address the politically sensitive topic of sexual assault in China. This is the first study to examine the cinematic contributions of Wang Nanfu and Ye Haiyan’s activism and feminist writings posted on Ye’s online social media accounts on Sina Weibo and Twitter. I unpack the power dynamics in this documentary as well as the interplay between the filmmaker’s subjectivity and the female rights activist’s subjectivity. This study also investigates how masculine aesthetic representations of sexual assault in Chinese cinema have blurred the issue of consent and shows how the subjectivities of female directors like Wang Nanfu and Vivian Qu bring more impactful representations of sexual violence in Chinese cinema.
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Herriot, Lindsay. "Rearticulating Youth Subjectivity Through Gay-Straight Alliances (GSAs)." Sexual and Gender Diversity in Schools 22, no. 1 (September 14, 2020): 38–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1071464ar.

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Populated by lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans*, queer (LGBTQ) and allied youth, school-based gay straight alliances (GSAs) offer a unique opportunity to re-imagine or redefine youth subjectivity, especially with regards to the intersections of sexual orientation, gender identity, and civic rights. Tracing the evolution of youth subjectivity from the emergence of Canadian schooling in the 1860s, I turn to Ontario’s Bill 13 as a recent example of how GSAs are subverting, or resisting these norms, and in so doing, operate as a kind of counter-public. Drawing from Jenks’ (2005) archetypes of the Dionysian and Apollonian child, I assert that GSAs can embody a third type of child subjectivity, the Athenian child (Smith, 2011; 2014) and, in so doing, provide theoretical space to reconstitute subjectivity for all youth.
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hyun-wook jung and Sun Nam Kim. "A Study on the Audience’s Subjectivity Related with Sexual Abuse Reports." Journal of Political Communication ll, no. 32 (March 2014): 297–324. http://dx.doi.org/10.35731/kpca.2014..32.014.

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Kramp, Michael. "The Resistant Social/Sexual Subjectivity of Hall's Ogilvy and Woolf's Rhoda." Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature 52, no. 2 (1998): 29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1348183.

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LEVIN-RICHARDSON, SARAH. "FUTUTA SUM HIC: FEMALE SUBJECTIVITY AND AGENCY IN POMPEIAN SEXUAL GRAFFITI." Classical Journal 108, no. 3 (2013): 319–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tcj.2013.0024.

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31

Cheng, S., L. Hamilton, S. Missari, and J. Ma. "Sexual Subjectivity among Adolescent Girls: Social Disadvantage and Young Adult Outcomes." Social Forces 93, no. 2 (August 25, 2014): 515–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sf/sou084.

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32

Stone, A. "Interracial Sexual Abuse and Legal Subjectivity in Antebellum Law and Literature." American Literature 81, no. 1 (January 1, 2009): 65–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00029831-2008-051.

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33

Willett, Julie A. "“A Father’s Touch:” Negotiating Masculinity and Sexual Subjectivity in Child Care." Sexuality & Culture 12, no. 4 (September 24, 2008): 275–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12119-008-9033-y.

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Park, Youngrye, Eun Ja Yeun, and Yoon Young Hwang. "Subjectivity About Sexual Ethics Among Korean Undergraduate Students Using Q Methodology." Asian Nursing Research 10, no. 2 (June 2016): 143–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anr.2016.05.002.

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Kotsko, Adam. "Christ without Adam: Subjectivity and Sexual Difference in the Philosophers’ Paul." Theology & Sexuality 21, no. 1 (January 2, 2015): 71–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13558358.2015.1115594.

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36

Bernard, Marion. "La subjectivation dominée/dominante." Symposium 23, no. 1 (2019): 56–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/symposium20192314.

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La pleine reconnaissance de l’existence du problème de la subjectivation sexuée ou colonisée conduit nécessairement à rendre relatif celui de la subjectivation dite « neutre ». Pourtant, le propre de la conscience dominante est de masquer son propre caractère de domination. Comment forcer la subjectivité dominante à se dévoiler? Nous proposons d’associer la description phénoménologique à une méthode de traduction depuis les expériences des dominé-e-s vers la reconstruction des expériences des dominant-e-s en tant que tel-les. Pour cela, nous partirons, dans une perspective intersectionnelle, des travaux phénoménologiques de Simone de Beauvoir et de Frantz Fanon.The full recognition of the problem of sexual or colonized subjectivation necessarily leads to question the neutrality of “normal subjectivity.” Yet the dominant consciousness tends to mask its own character of domination. How to force dominant subjectivity to reveal itself? We propose to associate the phenomenological description with a method of translation from the experiences of the dominated-ones to the reconstruction of the experiences of the dominants as such. For that, we will rely, in an intersectional perspective, on the phenomenological work of Simone de Beauvoir and Frantz Fanon.
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Weeks, Jeffrey. "The Sexual Citizen." Theory, Culture & Society 15, no. 3-4 (August 1998): 35–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263276498015003003.

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The `sexual citizen' is a new phenomenon in the erotic world, and a new player in the political and cultural arena, a product of the new primacy of sexual subjectivity in contemporary societies. Living at the fateful juncture of private claims to space, self-determination and pleasure, and public claims to rights, justice and recognition, the sexual citizen is a hybrid being, who tells us a great deal about the pace and scale of cultural transformation and new possibilities of the self and identity. Consideration of the sexual citizen also offers a new angle on recent debates about citizenship in all its complex dimensions, bringing to the fore issues that have often been occluded in these debates. The article explores these issues through the prism of three significant social developments: the democratization of relationships; the emergence of new subjectivities; and the proliferation of new `stories' about the body, the erotic and intimate life which both signal and encourage the growth of social and cultural capital, and in turn lead to new demands on the institutions of political life.
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Price, Joanna. "Remembering Vietnam: Subjectivity and Mourning in American New Realist Writing." Journal of American Studies 27, no. 2 (August 1993): 173–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875800031510.

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During the past decade a new school of writing has become prominent in the United States: a new realism. In the new realist novels, poems and short stories the condition of mourning recurs as providing both a symbol of and a structure for identity in consumer culture. The theme of mourning is frequently, although not always, explored in the context of invoking and reconstructing in memory the fathers, brothers and sons who were lost in the war in Vietnam. Reciprocally, the operation of images and narratives of the War in these texts casts some light upon the emergence, concerns and form of the new realist writing. In particular, images of the War provide a lens through which some of the meanings attached to sexual differences in contemporary American culture come into focus — a culture of which one may ask, after Julia Kristeva: “What can ‘identity’, even ‘sexual identity’, mean in a new…space where the very notion of identity is challenged?” The formation of identity through the structure of mourning is explored extensively in two new realist novels about remembering Vietnam: Jayne Anne Phillips'sMachine Dreamsand Bobbie Ann Mason'sIn Country.
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Miller, Lisa R. "Single women’s sexualities across the life course: The role of major events, transitions, and turning points." Sexualities 24, no. 1-2 (May 21, 2020): 226–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1363460720922754.

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Most research on women’s sexualities focuses on a single event or developmental period, often failing to document romantic and sexual trajectories over time. Moreover, life course studies of sexuality have not exclusively examined single women, including major life events that may alter their sexual attitudes and behaviors. Using life story interview data with 60 single, heterosexual women between the ages of 18 and 91, I document five common pathways through romantic and sexual life, including opting out of marital relationships, the development of sexual subjectivity, sexual exploration and maintaining independence, sex positivity and increases in sexual communication, and a maintenance of sexual conservatism. The findings also reveal the role of domestic violence, sexual abuse, relationship dissolution, sexually transmitted illnesses, and menopause in altering sexual attitudes and behaviors. This study has several implications for life course studies of intimate relationships and sexuality.
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Almeida, Arisa Nara Saldanha de, Lia Carneiro Silveira, Maria Rocineide Ferreira da Silva, Michell Ângelo Marques Araújo, and Terezinha Andrade Guimarães. "Subjectivity and Sexuality Production in Women Living With HIV/Aids: a Sociopoetic Production." Revista Latino-Americana de Enfermagem 18, no. 2 (April 2010): 163–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0104-11692010000200004.

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The study aims to apprehend the subjectivity production possibilities concerning sexuality in a group of women living with HIV/aids, based on the sociopoetic method. The subjects were nine women with HIV/aids attended at the public referral hospital for infectious diseases in Fortaleza-CE. The results appoint that sexuality appears in several dimensions: in the sexual act, in knowing their own body, in professional accomplishment, in feelings of desire and love, besides the feeling of freedom. We concluded that sexuality is present in the individual's totality; it is not limited to the sexual act, but goes much further and is characterized as a dynamic reality
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Choi, Yoona, and Il Sun Ko. "Concept Analysis of Female Sexual Subjectivity based on Walker and Avant's Method." Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing 23, no. 4 (2017): 243. http://dx.doi.org/10.4069/kjwhn.2017.23.4.243.

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Reddy, Gayatri. "Crossing ‘lines’ of subjectivity: The negotiation of sexual identity in Hyderabad, India." South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 24, sup001 (January 2001): 91–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00856400108723438.

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Oza, Rupal. "Sexual Subjectivity in Rape Narratives: Consent, Credibility, and Coercion in Rural Haryana." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 46, no. 1 (September 1, 2020): 103–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/709214.

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Ishii, Yukari. "Diversification as a New Disciplinary Power: Gender and Sexual Subjectivity in Postmodernity." International Journal of Japanese Sociology 27, no. 1 (October 4, 2017): 70–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijjs.12070.

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45

Ziv, Amalia. "“Our Virgin Friends and Wives”?: Female Sexual Subjectivity in Yona Wallach’s Poetry." Hebrew Studies 56, no. 1 (2015): 333–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hbr.2015.0008.

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King, Brian W. "Inverting virginity, abstinence, and conquest: Sexual agency and subjectivity in classroom conversation." Sexualities 17, no. 3 (March 2014): 310–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1363460713516337.

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47

Everson, Mark D., and Jose Miguel Sandoval. "Forensic child sexual abuse evaluations: Assessing subjectivity and bias in professional judgements." Child Abuse & Neglect 35, no. 4 (April 2011): 287–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2011.01.001.

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48

Wilson, Wayne. "Rape as Entertainment." Psychological Reports 63, no. 2 (October 1988): 607–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1988.63.2.607.

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Theatrical movies and television features distort aggravated rape and neglect simple rape, thereby compromising the integrity of real sexual assaults. A collection of 26 movies indicated three categories of rape as entertainment: the classics which subordinate rape to a significant drama, docudramas/melodramas which mingle fact with fiction and require substantiation, and exploitation films which use rape gratuitously. Movie rape remains difficult to judge given a film's subjectivity and its potential to dramatize sexual myths about rape deceptively.
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49

Wilson, Leah E. "Performing the techno-self: Paul B. Preciado’s Testo Junkie as a twenty-first century feminist narrative." French Cultural Studies 31, no. 4 (October 21, 2020): 342–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0957155820961647.

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This article examines Paul B. Preciado’s Testo Junkie as portraying the need for a postpornographic trans* feminism that contests homonormative queer and feminist responses to LGBTQIA+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning, intersex, and asexual) individuals in neoliberal French and Francophone societies during the rise of far-right anti-gender movements. Interrogating Preciado’s autotheory text, which questions what gendered performance entails in the pharmacopornographic era, allows for a consideration of the author’s bodily subjectivity and how he represents material-discursive practices to theorise his techno-identity. The article argues that Preciado highlights his sexual and gendered performance to assert a trans* identity that rebels against classification. Unveiling the multiplicity of gendered and sexual experiences that counter Western hegemonic binary categorisations, Preciado shows readers that through his material representation, he controls his own subjectivity to centre possibility with postpornographic feminist performance, expanding what it means to be a feminist subject in the twenty-first century.
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50

Waling, Andrea. "I Can’t/Can I Touch Him? Erotic Subjectivity, Sexual Attraction, and Research in the Field." Qualitative Inquiry 24, no. 9 (October 9, 2017): 720–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077800417734561.

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Sexual attraction and desire in the field have long been taboo subjects, where the researcher is expected to remain an objective observer, devoid of sexuality. Recently, scholars have advocated for the acknowledgment of sexual attraction and desire in the field as a way to think reflexively about the research process and subsequent impacts, known in anthropology as “erotic subjectivity.” This article reflects on the ethical dilemma of the female feminist researcher doing ethnographic fieldwork in such a space where sexual performativity and active desiring is demanded of them by the research subjects themselves. Based on an ethnographic account of professional men’s strip-tease show, this article details the dilemmas concerning the need to remain objective and distanced from such acts as a researcher, the feminist discomfiture in the blatant objectification and sexualization, both physically and visually of men, and the expectation to publicly perform sexuality by peers and research subjects alike.
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