Description

Book Synopsis

Guiding the reader through the development of sex education in Poland, Agnieszka Kościańska looks at how it has changed from the 19th century to the present day. The book compares how sex was described in school textbooks, including those scrapped by the communists for fear of offending religious sentiments, and explores how the Catholic church retained its power in Poland under various regimes. The book also identifies the women and men who changed the way sex was written about in the country, and how they established the field of Polish sex education.



Trade Review

“[This is] an exciting addition to both research bibliographies and university syllabi. Like all the best anthropology, it has the quality of both being acutely attuned to a field site’s specificities and speaking to broader, global, processes and questions.” • Anthropological Journal of European Cultures

“These splendid examples of writing about sexuality in Eastern Europe provide for scholars of gender and historians of modern Europe many exciting discoveries and beckon us to rethink how we make sense of gender norms in the world of politics and social practice. The comparisons that all authors draw upon—either with other countries in the region, with Western Europe, or with the United States—convincingly question any assumptions that readers might still have about the “backwardness” of the region vis-à-vis the West or any broad generalizations about the conservative nature of the communist regimes. There are many questions that these books leave open for future research. We are collectively in their debt for their findings, which establish an excellent framework for other case studies, other comparisons, and further generalization… These scholars have given us the tools and incentives to continue the work.” • Aspasia

“The Author places her analysis in the context of today’s debates on sex education in Polish schools. It appears that the history of these debates is more complicated than one might think based on widespread narratives of progress: it does not lead from the backwardness of the early 20th century to conservatism and censorship of state socialism and to the wind of liberalism that came from the West during the postsocialist transformation.” • Etnografia Polska (Polish Ethnography)



Table of Contents

Foreword
Frances Pine

Preface to the English Edition
Acknowledgements

Introduction: Puberty and Politics

Part I: Behind and Beyond the School Gates

Chapter 1. Poland Bids Farewell to the Stork: The First Class and the First Handbook
Chapter 2. Masturbation: Not Harmful, but …
Chapter 3. The First Time
Chapter 4. How (Not) to Get Pregnant
Chapter 5. The Prevention of Sexually Transmitted Diseases: Abstinence, or Maybe Mutual Masturbation?
Chapter 6. Is Pornography a Form of Education?
Chapter 7. Queerness: Is Treatment Possible and Effective?
Chapter 8. 'Don’t Rape!': The Sexual Violence Prevention Campaign That Never Existed

Part II: The View from the Pulpit

Chapter 9. Sinful and Unhealthy: Sex Education the Catholic Way

Part III: Country Matters

Chapter 10. 'Come Get your Acorns, Boys': Sex Education in the Countryside

Conclusion: A Culture of Emancipation, a Culture of Dialogue

References
Index

To See a Moose: The History of Polish Sex

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    A Hardback by Agnieszka Kościańska

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      View other formats and editions of To See a Moose: The History of Polish Sex by Agnieszka Kościańska

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 14/05/2021
      ISBN13: 9781800730601, 978-1800730601
      ISBN10: 1800730608

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Guiding the reader through the development of sex education in Poland, Agnieszka Kościańska looks at how it has changed from the 19th century to the present day. The book compares how sex was described in school textbooks, including those scrapped by the communists for fear of offending religious sentiments, and explores how the Catholic church retained its power in Poland under various regimes. The book also identifies the women and men who changed the way sex was written about in the country, and how they established the field of Polish sex education.



      Trade Review

      “[This is] an exciting addition to both research bibliographies and university syllabi. Like all the best anthropology, it has the quality of both being acutely attuned to a field site’s specificities and speaking to broader, global, processes and questions.” • Anthropological Journal of European Cultures

      “These splendid examples of writing about sexuality in Eastern Europe provide for scholars of gender and historians of modern Europe many exciting discoveries and beckon us to rethink how we make sense of gender norms in the world of politics and social practice. The comparisons that all authors draw upon—either with other countries in the region, with Western Europe, or with the United States—convincingly question any assumptions that readers might still have about the “backwardness” of the region vis-à-vis the West or any broad generalizations about the conservative nature of the communist regimes. There are many questions that these books leave open for future research. We are collectively in their debt for their findings, which establish an excellent framework for other case studies, other comparisons, and further generalization… These scholars have given us the tools and incentives to continue the work.” • Aspasia

      “The Author places her analysis in the context of today’s debates on sex education in Polish schools. It appears that the history of these debates is more complicated than one might think based on widespread narratives of progress: it does not lead from the backwardness of the early 20th century to conservatism and censorship of state socialism and to the wind of liberalism that came from the West during the postsocialist transformation.” • Etnografia Polska (Polish Ethnography)



      Table of Contents

      Foreword
      Frances Pine

      Preface to the English Edition
      Acknowledgements

      Introduction: Puberty and Politics

      Part I: Behind and Beyond the School Gates

      Chapter 1. Poland Bids Farewell to the Stork: The First Class and the First Handbook
      Chapter 2. Masturbation: Not Harmful, but …
      Chapter 3. The First Time
      Chapter 4. How (Not) to Get Pregnant
      Chapter 5. The Prevention of Sexually Transmitted Diseases: Abstinence, or Maybe Mutual Masturbation?
      Chapter 6. Is Pornography a Form of Education?
      Chapter 7. Queerness: Is Treatment Possible and Effective?
      Chapter 8. 'Don’t Rape!': The Sexual Violence Prevention Campaign That Never Existed

      Part II: The View from the Pulpit

      Chapter 9. Sinful and Unhealthy: Sex Education the Catholic Way

      Part III: Country Matters

      Chapter 10. 'Come Get your Acorns, Boys': Sex Education in the Countryside

      Conclusion: A Culture of Emancipation, a Culture of Dialogue

      References
      Index

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