Description

Book Synopsis
Weaving through theoretical and empirical examples drawn from sociology, psychology, queer and cultural studies, this book produces a transdisciplinary perspective on sexual identities, subjectivities and politics that contributes to the debates ranging from identity politics and gay marriage, to mental health 'risks' and queer youth suicide.

Trade Review

"Any student of sexuality will appreciate the vast wealth of sources which Johnson has compiled in this book, and her arguments make an excellent contribution to that much-theorised conceptual impasse. Johnson's lucid style and clarity of thought do also make this book suitable for those with only an intermediate level of knowledge (it would serve, for example, as a much better introduction to the field than Butler's abstruse language)."
LSE Reviews of Books

"Katherine Johnson aims to 'queer' false polarities within the study of sexuality. She attempts to evaluate how sexuality can be studied more holistically. Always on the side of social justice, Johnson's book is also a political engagement with sexuality. This highly ethical book should be required reading for those working inbetween and across disciplines, and those entrenched within institutional paradigms who cannot see the wood for the trees."
Sally Munt, University of Sussex

"Appreciative of social constructionist approaches while recognizing their limits, Katherine Johnson clears the way for a much-needed psychosocial analysis of sexuality. Along the way, she takes us on a tour of many of the field's crucial debates gay genes, the origins of desire, the affective turn, among others steadfastly refusing the reductionism that all too frequently plagues dominant paradigms."
Arlene Stein, Rutgers University



Table of Contents

1. Introducing Sexuality: towards the psychosocial
2. Developing Sexuality
3. Constructing Sexuality
4. Queering Sexuality
5. Affecting Sexuality
6. Transforming Sexuality
7. A Psychosocial Manifesto for Queer Futures

Sexuality

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    £45.00

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    RRP £50.00 – you save £5.00 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 3 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Katherine Johnson

    1 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of Sexuality by Katherine Johnson

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 28/11/2014
      ISBN13: 9780745641317, 978-0745641317
      ISBN10: 0745641318

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Weaving through theoretical and empirical examples drawn from sociology, psychology, queer and cultural studies, this book produces a transdisciplinary perspective on sexual identities, subjectivities and politics that contributes to the debates ranging from identity politics and gay marriage, to mental health 'risks' and queer youth suicide.

      Trade Review

      "Any student of sexuality will appreciate the vast wealth of sources which Johnson has compiled in this book, and her arguments make an excellent contribution to that much-theorised conceptual impasse. Johnson's lucid style and clarity of thought do also make this book suitable for those with only an intermediate level of knowledge (it would serve, for example, as a much better introduction to the field than Butler's abstruse language)."
      LSE Reviews of Books

      "Katherine Johnson aims to 'queer' false polarities within the study of sexuality. She attempts to evaluate how sexuality can be studied more holistically. Always on the side of social justice, Johnson's book is also a political engagement with sexuality. This highly ethical book should be required reading for those working inbetween and across disciplines, and those entrenched within institutional paradigms who cannot see the wood for the trees."
      Sally Munt, University of Sussex

      "Appreciative of social constructionist approaches while recognizing their limits, Katherine Johnson clears the way for a much-needed psychosocial analysis of sexuality. Along the way, she takes us on a tour of many of the field's crucial debates gay genes, the origins of desire, the affective turn, among others steadfastly refusing the reductionism that all too frequently plagues dominant paradigms."
      Arlene Stein, Rutgers University



      Table of Contents

      1. Introducing Sexuality: towards the psychosocial
      2. Developing Sexuality
      3. Constructing Sexuality
      4. Queering Sexuality
      5. Affecting Sexuality
      6. Transforming Sexuality
      7. A Psychosocial Manifesto for Queer Futures

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