According to David Halperin, sexuality in our time is typified
by a "crisis in contemporary sexual definition." What is sexuality?
What does it mean to have a sexual identity or orientation? What is
the relationship between sexuality as a knowledge construct, on one
hand, and the often messy flows of desire and practices of love, on
the other? How and why are some sexual, erotic, and intimate
practices normalized and others marginalized?
Queer Theory has emerged in the West as one of the most
provocative analytical tools in the humanities and social sciences.
It scrutinizes identity and social structures that take
heteronormativity for granted that do not question the social
construction of heterosexuality as normative in relation to its
oppositional binary, homosexuality. At the same time, bisexuality
is a practice, identity, and orientation that challenges the binary
logic around which cultural notions of sexuality are organized. It
is a portal to the imagination of a world of amorous expression
beyond that divide.
This provocative collection presents bisexuality and queer
theory as two parallel thought collectives that have made
significant contributions to cultural discourses about sexual and
amorous practices since the onset of the AIDS era, and explores the
ideas that circulate in these thought collectives today. We learn
much about the construction and experience of sexuality, and the
power it still holds throughout the contemporary Western world to
shape identities and practices. This volume challenges our
understanding of what it means to be sexual, to have a sexual
identity, and to practise the arts of loving.
This book was orginally published as a special issue of the
Journal of Bisexuality."
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