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Sexing
the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction of Sexuality.
By Anne Fausto-Sterling. New York: Basic Books, 2000,
473 pages.
Spanish Translation: Cuerpos sexuados. Editorial Melusina: Barcelona, Spain, 2006. |
Professor
Fausto-Sterling's most recent work, entitled Sexing
the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction of Sexuality,
was published by Basic Books in February 2000. It examines
the social nature of biological knowledge about animal
and human sexuality.
Sexing
the Body received the Distinguished Publication
Award in 2001 by the Association for Women in Psychology.
In 2000 it was chosen as one of the Outstanding Academic
Books of 2000 by CHOICE Magazine, Published
by the American Library Association. It was also co-winner
of the Robert K Merton Award of the American
Sociological Association Section on Science,
Knowledge and Technology.
From
the back cover:
"Why do some people prefer heterosexual love
while others fancy the same sex? Do women and men
have different brains? Is sexual identity biologically
determined or a product of social convention? In this
brilliant and provocative book, the acclaimed author
of Myths of Gender argues that the answers to these
thorny questions lie as much in the realm of politics
as they do in the world of science. Without pandering
to the press or politics, Fausto-Sterling builds an
entirely new framework for sexing the body-one that
focuses solely on the individual."
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e a c t i o n s
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"A
fascinating and essential book, at once vigorous, erudite,
amiable and sly."
- Natalie Angier |
Listen
to Professor Fausto-Sterling discuss Sexing the Body
on Gender
Talk.
Sexing
the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction of Sexuality. (Review)
Journal of Sex Research, Feb, 2001, by William
B. Stanley
In
the realm of the sexes. (Biologist Anne Fausto-Sterling
believes there are actually five distinct genders) The
Advocate, March 14, 2000, by Michael Bronski
How
common is intersex? A response to Anne Fausto-Sterling.
Journal of Sex Research, August, 2002, by Leonard
Sax
"A
fascinating and essential book, at once vigorous,
erudite, amiable and sly. Fausto-Sterling demonstrates
beautifully the futility of talking about nature versus
nurture, genes versus environment or 'true' sexuality
as opposed to 'socially constructed' gender. She shows
that it makes no more sense to favor either biology
or culture in explaining the roots of human sexuality
than it would to give primacy to hydrogen over oxygen
when describing the properties of water. An inspiring
corrective, from one of our leading scholars of science,
history and feminism, to the simplistic notions of
maleness and femaleness that we humans seem almost
genetically inclined to believe."
- Natalie Angier, Pulitzer-prize winner and author
of Woman: An Intimate Geography
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Anne
Fausto-Sterling's book, Myths of Gender: Biological
Theories About Men And Women appeared in a second
edition in 1992 which includes two new chapters on brain
anatomy, sex differences and homosexuality.
In
Myths of Gender, Professor Fausto-Sterling examines
numerous scientific claims about biologically-based
sex differences between men and women. Is there evidence--biological,
genetic, evolutionary or psychological--to support the
notion that our brains differ physically and that this,
in turn, causes behavioral differences between the sexes?
At once a scientific and a political statement, Myths
of Gender seeks to reveal the politics involved
in science.
"In
this book I examine mainstream scientific investigations
of gender by looking closely at them through the eyes
of a scientist who is also a feminist... This book
is a scientific statement and a political statement.
It could not be otherwise. Where I differ from some
of those I take to task is in not denying my politics.
Scientists who do deny their politics--who claim to
be objective and unemotional about gender while living
in a world where even boats and automobiles are identified
by sex--are fooling both themselves and the public
at large."
-Anne Fausto-Sterling, "The biological connection:
an introduction," Myths of Gender.
Evelyn
Fox Keller writes that the book "demonstrates in
case after case the inadequacy of the evidence, and
the abundance of alternative explanations, and the presence
of circular reasoning..." Writing in the New York
Review of Books, Stephen Jay Gould called it "A
fine contribution to the empirical literature on human
gender differences...a courageous book", while
Robert Attenborough, in a review of the book for Nature
wrote "This book is closely and intelligently argued,
well documented factually and carefully referenced..."
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Myths
of Gender: Biological Theories about Women and Men,
2nd edition (with two new chapters). New
York: Basic Books, 1992
Myths of Gender: Biological Theories about Women
and Men, New York: Basic Books, 1985
German translation: Gefangene des Geschlechts?
1988
Japanese translation: 1990
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Brown
University // Providence, Rhode Island 02912 // 401.863.1000
Last update: 8/20/2007 |
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