|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
1. Brings together a range of diverse academic disciplines on the
topic of embodiment, including: anthropology; astrophysics;
evolutionary, cell, molecular, and developmental biology; cognitive
science; cognitive and developmental psychology; communication;
geology; kinesiology; philosophy; political science and sociology.
2. Includes material on two hot topics: engagement with human
corporeality and VR. 3. Short, pithy, and accessible chapters that
will challenge the reader and present cutting-edge scholarship.
For decades, the field of gender, sex, and sexualities has been a
focal point of increasing interest. This inquiry has been ignited
by successive waves of dramatic social change, chief among them:
the re-emergence of feminist movements in the U.S. and Europe in
the late 1960s; the sustained (and increasingly successful) bids
for legal, social, and religious acceptance of non-heterosexual
sexualities in many parts of the world; and the burgeoning number
of people (whether cisgendered, gender-variant, trans, or
questioning) whose individual and collective experiences of gender
and sexuality warrant deeper understanding and further progress
toward a fuller realization of human potential and civil rights. In
psychology, the intellectual project of understanding gender, sex,
and sexualities encompasses a variety of subfields spanning
neuroscience and developmental, cognitive, social, and cultural
psychology, as well as critical theory. As such, these approaches
have inspired new and different psychological questions, as well as
increased interest in previously unfamiliar topics of
investigation. Edited by Nancy K. Dess, Jeanne Marecek, and Leslie
C. Bell, Gender, Sex, and Sexualities offers both students and
scholars the tools they need to consider and approach such
questions as: how do children come to embrace (or repudiate)
gendered activities and identities; how do people experience
intimacy, desire, and sexual arousal; and what strategies can
psychologists use to de-center their own points of view and
effectively contribute to a decolonial psychology? As a result,
this volume will open new avenues of inquiry as well as
cross-disciplinary conversations for readers everywhere.
|
|