I’d like to be able to say that Diana Scully and Pauline Bart’s critique of gynaecological textbooks, and the misogynistic message that they convey, is of interest only for historical reasons. I’d like to be able to say that in the 30 years since they turned a critical feminist gaze on the pronouncements of this particular group of medical men, a more enlightened, egalitarian view of women’s bodies, women’s sexuality and of reproduction has emerged. But I can’t. Only the rhetoric and the focus have changed
On hormones, technologies and bodies. An archeology of sex hormones 1923-1940. N. Oudshoorn. Nowad...
Dr. Legato\u27s keynote speech, delivered at the Journal\u27s Symposium, covered the evolution of ge...
Contemporary life is taking its toll on sex, according to scientific, environmental and pop-scientif...
This essay is reprinted courtesy of the Indiana University Press and the authors. The explanatory fo...
Through a detailed analysis of exterior and interior images of the female body, this book questions ...
The aim of this paper is to call the attention, especially that of feminists, to the current progres...
In this thesis, I propose a revision of various positions taken by feminist study which aid us in co...
This article reviews recent work in the social study of science (Social Studies of Knowledge or SSK)...
Investigating the theoretical and practical ways in which focusing on female biology can not only al...
Although the term “female sexual dysfunction” is fairly new, the medicalization of women's sexuality...
The end of the last century was a particularly vibrant period for feminist bioethics. Almost two dec...
A sociological and historical study of the development of reproductive technologies, this book focus...
I love the term 'natural history' because it encapsulates the sentiment that nature's operations hav...
This thesis looks at the language describing the human reproductive system present in contemporary m...
In 1861, Charles Darwin wrote “We do not even in the least know the final cause of sexuality; why ne...
On hormones, technologies and bodies. An archeology of sex hormones 1923-1940. N. Oudshoorn. Nowad...
Dr. Legato\u27s keynote speech, delivered at the Journal\u27s Symposium, covered the evolution of ge...
Contemporary life is taking its toll on sex, according to scientific, environmental and pop-scientif...
This essay is reprinted courtesy of the Indiana University Press and the authors. The explanatory fo...
Through a detailed analysis of exterior and interior images of the female body, this book questions ...
The aim of this paper is to call the attention, especially that of feminists, to the current progres...
In this thesis, I propose a revision of various positions taken by feminist study which aid us in co...
This article reviews recent work in the social study of science (Social Studies of Knowledge or SSK)...
Investigating the theoretical and practical ways in which focusing on female biology can not only al...
Although the term “female sexual dysfunction” is fairly new, the medicalization of women's sexuality...
The end of the last century was a particularly vibrant period for feminist bioethics. Almost two dec...
A sociological and historical study of the development of reproductive technologies, this book focus...
I love the term 'natural history' because it encapsulates the sentiment that nature's operations hav...
This thesis looks at the language describing the human reproductive system present in contemporary m...
In 1861, Charles Darwin wrote “We do not even in the least know the final cause of sexuality; why ne...
On hormones, technologies and bodies. An archeology of sex hormones 1923-1940. N. Oudshoorn. Nowad...
Dr. Legato\u27s keynote speech, delivered at the Journal\u27s Symposium, covered the evolution of ge...
Contemporary life is taking its toll on sex, according to scientific, environmental and pop-scientif...