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Heterosexual Histories. Группа авторовЧитать онлайн книгу.

Heterosexual Histories - Группа авторов


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past echo David Halperin’s insistence that words like “heterosexuality,” “homosexuality,” and even “sexuality” constitute “a significant obstacle to understanding the distinctive features of sexual life in non-Western and pre-modern cultures” (emphasis added).44 A short essay such as this cannot hope to provide a comprehensive discussion of the challenges involved in recovering premodern conceptions of gender and sex, let alone a complete reconstruction of what that conceptual world may have looked like. But I do hope to have illustrated through a brief examination of two particular types of relationship, both endorsed enthusiastically by early Americans, just how unhelpful are our most fundamental assumptions and beliefs about what we now refer to as gender and sexuality in making sense of the past. The loving and passionate relationships that early American men were encouraged to develop with Jesus Christ and with one another, even as legal and religious codes condemned sex between men, can seem very bizarre to a modern Western sensibility, because our cultural wiring is so different from theirs. That wiring extends deep inside us. Because most modern Westerners have internalized the paradigm of sexual orientation, it is extremely difficult for us to wrap our minds around a world in which gendered expression and the relationship between love and sex operated according to a different logic. Even finding words that are not freighted with the baggage of modernity poses a huge challenge (as many of us who have tried to write about sexual cultures in the past will attest). Yet try we must. Otherwise, we will achieve little more than to project our sense of ourselves onto the past.45

      That daunting yet exciting project of reconstructing the “cultural poetics of desire” by which people lived in the past has important implications for historians of modern sexuality. Scholars working on the experience, articulation, and policing of heterosexuality in the modern United States and Europe should consider that the rest of the world, including large numbers of migrants making their way into Western countries, do not necessarily think about sex in the same way (even as Western values seek to establish cultural hegemony across the globe). In an era of massive migration, the paradigm of sexuality that took hold in the twentieth-century West now coexists alongside very different models for making sense of love and desire. Meanwhile, alternative ways of understanding and evaluating sexuality articulated by theorists, evangelicals, and many young people who embrace a much more fluid sense of their sexual identities are creating an even more variegated and volatile cultural landscape. Heterosexuality is not only a recent and idiosyncratic phenomenon but may also turn out to be much more fragile and transient than we often assume.

      Notes


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