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After widespread neglect over many years, the study of human
sexuality has recently come to the forefront of many of the most
important debates in contemporary society and culture. This book
addresses seriously the issue of how to improve the methodological
basis of research into non-heterosexual sexualities, exploring the
key question of what different methodological and theoretical uses
of intersectionality contribute to our understandings of
non-heterosexual sexualities. Bringing together research from the
UK, USA, Europe and Australasia, this innovative collection
rethinks traditional methodologies, creating new epistemologies and
applying new approaches, whilst critically examining key issues,
including communities, identities, relationships, sexualities,
homosexual parenthood, fostering, civil marriage, and politics. As
such, it will be of interest to researchers, scholars and students
across the social sciences and health professionals.
After widespread neglect over many years, the study of human
sexuality has recently come to the forefront of many of the most
important debates in contemporary society and culture. This book
addresses seriously the issue of how to improve the methodological
basis of research into non-heterosexual sexualities, exploring the
key question of what different methodological and theoretical uses
of intersectionality contribute to our understandings of
non-heterosexual sexualities. Bringing together research from the
UK, USA, Europe and Australasia, this innovative collection
rethinks traditional methodologies, creating new epistemologies and
applying new approaches, whilst critically examining key issues,
including communities, identities, relationships, sexualities,
homosexual parenthood, fostering, civil marriage, and politics. As
such, it will be of interest to researchers, scholars and students
across the social sciences and health professionals.
This title was first published in 2002: Ethnicity, culture and
sexual orientation are salient aspects of human identity. While
diversity adds richness to the threads of our human tapestry,
minorities often feel vulnerable with open disclosure and retreat
from exposures they fear could leave them in jeopardy. This is
especially so with gay men of colour. Xenophobia, homophobia and
fear of HIV/AIDS combine to make our society a difficult one for
gay men of colour. This book explores a broad range of
culture-related topics specific to the experience of Anglo-Cypriot
men resident in Britain who have sex with men. Along with
empirical, clinical and theoretical discussions, the inclusion of
personal accounts offers poignant insight into additional
complexities, pressures and losses that gay men of colour must cope
with in a world that often handles diversity with the closed fist
of bigotry.
Social Research in Health and Illness offers a theoretically
informed guide to practising the key social research methods in
investigating health and illness. Examining both methods and
methodology, the authors explore the importance of selecting the
appropriate research method for the project in question,
demonstrating that researchers do not simply apply a set of neutral
techniques to the issues that they investigate, but take part in a
dynamic, reflective engagement with social and cultural worlds in a
process of continual learning. With its application of a variety of
research methods to concrete cases, this book provides a sociology
of specific health conditions, thus rendering them more
understandable, whilst clarifying the nature of research concepts,
approaches, methods and methodologies by demonstrating their use in
real-life settings. Drawing on case studies involving a range of
health conditions, including mental illness, HIV, diabetes, kidney
disease, Alzheimer's disease, heart disease, breast cancer,
thalassaemia and multiple sclerosis, the authors examine a range of
methodological issues, exploring the use of focus groups,
observation, data archives, interviews and surveys, while also
considering questions of ethics and analysis. A comprehensive and
practical examination of research methods in use in a defined field
of social scientific enquiry, this volume is essential reading for
scholars, graduate students and healthcare professionals with
interests in conducting qualitative and quantitative research in
the fields of health and medicine.
This title was first published in 2002: Ethnicity, culture and
sexual orientation are salient aspects of human identity. While
diversity adds richness to the threads of our human tapestry,
minorities often feel vulnerable with open disclosure and retreat
from exposures they fear could leave them in jeopardy. This is
especially so with gay men of colour. Xenophobia, homophobia and
fear of HIV/AIDS combine to make our society a difficult one for
gay men of colour. This book explores a broad range of
culture-related topics specific to the experience of Anglo-Cypriot
men resident in Britain who have sex with men. Along with
empirical, clinical and theoretical discussions, the inclusion of
personal accounts offers poignant insight into additional
complexities, pressures and losses that gay men of colour must cope
with in a world that often handles diversity with the closed fist
of bigotry.
Social Research in Health and Illness offers a theoretically
informed guide to practising the key social research methods in
investigating health and illness. Examining both methods and
methodology, the authors explore the importance of selecting the
appropriate research method for the project in question,
demonstrating that researchers do not simply apply a set of neutral
techniques to the issues that they investigate, but take part in a
dynamic, reflective engagement with social and cultural worlds in a
process of continual learning. With its application of a variety of
research methods to concrete cases, this book provides a sociology
of specific health conditions, thus rendering them more
understandable, whilst clarifying the nature of research concepts,
approaches, methods and methodologies by demonstrating their use in
real-life settings. Drawing on case studies involving a range of
health conditions, including mental illness, HIV, diabetes, kidney
disease, Alzheimer's disease, heart disease, breast cancer,
thalassaemia and multiple sclerosis, the authors examine a range of
methodological issues, exploring the use of focus groups,
observation, data archives, interviews and surveys, while also
considering questions of ethics and analysis. A comprehensive and
practical examination of research methods in use in a defined field
of social scientific enquiry, this volume is essential reading for
scholars, graduate students and healthcare professionals with
interests in conducting qualitative and quantitative research in
the fields of health and medicine.
This book provides an exploratory investigation into the world of
atypical sexual variations and interactions, in particular, the
intersections of homosexuality and ethnicity, sexual addiction and
codependency, sex work and cabaret patronage, and Cybersex
addiction. It deals primarily with the intrapersonal,
interpersonal, historical, social, and cultural manifestations of
such atypical interactions and their social construction as
atypical behaviors. This book is primarily intended for graduate,
and upper level undergraduate, students in psychology, sociology,
family studies, and social sciences. Upon reading the book, readers
will come to an understanding of how homosexuality, codependency,
sex work, and Cybersex (Internet pornography) come to affect our
emotional, psychological, sexual, and relational well being. This
book is unique in the sense that it provides constextually rich
information into such neglected and taboo topics by utilizing
unique ethnographic and autoethnographic methodological means.
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