There was a moment in the 1970s when sex was what mattered most
to feminists. White middle-class women viewed sex as central to
both their oppression and their liberation. Young women started to
speak and write about the clitoris, orgasm, and masturbation, and
publishers and the news media jumped at the opportunity to
disseminate their views. In "Desiring Revolution, " Gerhard asks
why issues of sex and female pleasure came to matter so much to
these "second-wave feminists." In answering this question Gerhard
reveals the diverse views of sexuality within feminism and shows
how the radical ideas put forward by this generation of American
women was a response to attempts to define and contain female
sexuality going back to the beginning of the century.
Gerhard begins by showing how the "marriage experts" of the
first half of the twentieth century led people to believe that
female sexuality was bound up in bearing children. Ideas about
normal, white, female heterosexuality began to change, however, in
the 1950s and 1960s with the widely reported, and somewhat
shocking, studies of Kinsey and Masters and Johnson, whose research
spoke frankly about female sexual anatomy, practices, and
pleasures.
Gerhard then focuses on the sexual revolution between 1968 and
1975. Examining the work of Betty Friedan, Germaine Greer, Erica
Jong, and Kate Millet, among many others, she reveals how little
the diverse representatives of this movement shared other than the
desire that women gain control of their own sexual destinies.
Finally, Gerhard examines the divisions that opened up between
anti-pornography (or "anti-sex") feminists and anti-censorship (or
"pro-sex") radicals.
At once erudite and refreshingly accessible, "Desiring
Revolution" provides the first full account of the unfolding of the
feminist sexual revolution.
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