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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gail Hawkes (University of New England, Armidale, Australia)Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd Imprint: Polity Press Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.327kg ISBN: 9780745616711ISBN 10: 0745616712 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 15 May 2004 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsIntroduction. Prologue: The sexual landscape of the new millennium. Chapter 1: Sex Pleasure And Self- Control In Classical Antiquity. Chapter 2: Sinful Sex: Early Christianity And The Problem Of Desire. Chapter 3: Guilty Sex, Courtly Love And The Unruly Body: Medieval Themes And Practices. Chapter 4: Sex, The Body And Desire In The Pre-Modern Period. Chapter Five: Pleasure And Desire In The Age Of Modernity. Chapter 6: Obligatory Pleasures And Undisciplined Desires: The Sexual Century Reviewed. Epilogue: Themes And Reflections. References and Bibliography. IndexReviewsThis volume is convincingly and engagingly written as a whole, [but] Hawkes is at her best when she focuses on the a Sexual Centurya , the last hundred years with its apparent explosion of pleasures rapidly channeled into bland consumerism. Archives of Sexual Behaviour The book is well written and accessible to the non--expert reader. It contains an extensive bibliography and each chapter has a list of suggested further reading which is useful for those who would like to explore further any of the issues raised. I found it interesting and helpful. Insights An accessible volume!a readable journey through self--control in antiquity, sinful sex in the middle ages, guilty sex and courtly love in Renaissance, the body and desire in the Enlightenment and modern period, and the undisciplined desires of today. Canadian Journal of History Hawkes paints a complex portrait of sexuality in the West, one that defies simple narratives of repression and liberation, in which sexual discourses are constantly shifting, and there is no teleological motion ... Sex and Pleasure in Western Culture is an intriguing survey. British Journal of Sociology Gail Hawkes's new book is a fascinating anatomy of the pleasures and dangers that have long swirled around the erotic. From Plato to the present, from early Christian mortifications of flesh to the hedonistic individualism of the millennium, desire and death, joy and fear mingle, but in ever changing patterns. This book explores the kaleidoscope of sexuality across the centuries, and in doing so brings new insights to the understanding of the body and its pleasures in our historic present. Jeffrey Weeks, London South Bank University This volume is convincingly and engagingly written as a whole, [but] Hawkes is at her best when she focuses on the 'Sexual Century', the last hundred years with its apparent explosion of pleasures rapidly channeled into bland consumerism. Archives of Sexual Behaviour The book is well written and accessible to the non-expert reader. It contains an extensive bibliography and each chapter has a list of suggested further reading which is useful for those who would like to explore further any of the issues raised. I found it interesting and helpful. Insights An accessible volume...a readable journey through self-control in antiquity, sinful sex in the middle ages, guilty sex and courtly love in Renaissance, the body and desire in the Enlightenment and modern period, and the undisciplined desires of today. Canadian Journal of History Hawkes paints a complex portrait of sexuality in the West, one that defies simple narratives of repression and liberation, in which sexual discourses are constantly shifting, and there is no teleological motion ... Sex and Pleasure in Western Culture is an intriguing survey. British Journal of Sociology Gail Hawkes's new book is a fascinating anatomy of the pleasures and dangers that have long swirled around the erotic. From Plato to the present, from early Christian mortifications of flesh to the hedonistic individualism of the millennium, desire and death, joy and fear mingle, but in ever changing patterns. This book explores the kaleidoscope of sexuality across the centuries, and in doing so brings new insights to the understanding of the body and its pleasures in our historic present. Jeffrey Weeks, London South Bank University ?This volume is convincingly and engagingly written as a whole, [but] Hawkes is at her best when she focuses on the 'Sexual Century', the last hundred years with its apparent explosion of pleasures rapidly channeled into bland consumerism.? Archives of Sexual Behaviour ?The book is well written and accessible to the non-expert reader. It contains an extensive bibliography and each chapter has a list of suggested further reading which is useful for those who would like to explore further any of the issues raised. I found it interesting and helpful.? Insights ?An accessible volume?a readable journey through self-control in antiquity, sinful sex in the middle ages, guilty sex and courtly love in Renaissance, the body and desire in the Enlightenment and modern period, and the undisciplined desires of today.? Canadian Journal of History ?Hawkes paints a complex portrait of sexuality in the West, one that defies simple narratives of repression and liberation, in which sexual discourses are constantly shifting, and there is no teleological motion ... Sex and Pleasure in Western Culture is an intriguing survey.? British Journal of Sociology ?Gail Hawkes?s new book is a fascinating anatomy of the pleasures and dangers that have long swirled around the erotic. From Plato to the present, from early Christian mortifications of flesh to the hedonistic individualism of the millennium, desire and death, joy and fear mingle, but in ever changing patterns. This book explores the kaleidoscope of sexuality across the centuries, and in doing so brings new insights to the understanding of the body and its pleasures in our historic present.? Jeffrey Weeks, London South Bank University Author InformationGail Hawkes is Lecturer in Sociology at University of New England, Armidale, Australia Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |