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9781421426433 Academic Inspection Copy

The Natural History of Sexuality in Early America

  • ISBN-13: 9781421426433
  • Publisher: JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS
    Imprint: JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • By Greta LaFleur
  • Price: AUD $145.00
  • Stock: 0 in stock
  • Availability: This book is temporarily out of stock, order will be despatched as soon as fresh stock is received.
  • Local release date: 14/01/2019
  • Format: Hardback 304 pages Weight: 0g
  • Categories: History of the Americas [HBJK]
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If sexology'the science of sex'came into being sometime in the nineteenth century, then how did statesmen, scientists, and everyday people make meaning out of sex before that point? In The Natural History of Sexuality in Early America, Greta LaFleur demonstrates that eighteenth-century natural history'the study of organic life in its environment'actually provided the intellectual foundations for the later development of the scientific study of sex.

Natural historians understood the human body to be a ""porous envelope,"" eminently vulnerable to its environment. Yet historians of sexuality have tended to rely on archival evidence of genital-based or otherwise bodily sex acts for its source material. Through careful readings of both elite natural history texts alongside popular print forms that circulated widely in the British North American colonies during the long eighteenth century'among them Barbary captivity, execution, cross-dressing, and anti-vice narratives'LaFleur traces the development of a broad knowledge of sexuality defined in terms of the dynamic relationship between the human and its natural, social, physical, and climatic milieu.

At the heart of this book is the question of how to produce a history of sexuality for an era in which modern vocabularies for sex and desire were unavailable. LaFleur demonstrates how environmental logic was used to explain sexual behavior on a broad scale, not just among the educated elite who wrote and read natural historical texts. Reading popular print alongside contemporary natural historical writing, LaFleur reunites the history of sexuality with the history of race, demonstrating how they were bound to one another by the emergence of the human sciences in the eighteenth century. Ultimately, The Natural History of Sexuality in Early America not only rewrites all dominant scholarly narratives of early sexual behavior but also poses a major intervention into queer theoretical understandings of the relationship between sex and the subject.

Acknowledgments
Introduction:Toward an Environmental Theory of Early Sexuality
1. The Natural History of Sexuality
2. The Complexion of Sodomy
3. ""Egyptian Lusts"" and Other Bad Habits: Narrating Sexual Deviance and Executing Racial Difference
4. ""Columbia's Soil"": Botanical Sexuality and the Colonial Landscape in Herman Mann's The Female Review
5. Vice, Race, and the Sexuality of Space: The Early Nineteenth Century in Boston's ""Negro Hill""
Epilogue: Thinking Sex—Without the Subject
Notes
Works Cited

""In The Natural History of Sexuality in Early America, Greta LaFleur invites readers to consider a different body. The book effectively historicizes categories that are often take for granted (sex, race, vice, habit), and shows us not only their temporal contingency, but also invites the reader to delve into the strangeness of early modern ontologies and epistemologies. LaFleur ultimately crafts a space of possibility for different futures as well. These are futures of greater intersectional solidarity in which we are invited to think about the collective, and move past the dominance of the individual, the subjective and modern biopoliticized body.""

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