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Prescription For Heterosexuality Sexual Citizenship In The Cold War Era 1st Edition Carolyn Herbst Lewis

  • SKU: BELL-2397184
Prescription For Heterosexuality Sexual Citizenship In The Cold War Era 1st Edition Carolyn Herbst Lewis
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Prescription For Heterosexuality Sexual Citizenship In The Cold War Era 1st Edition Carolyn Herbst Lewis instant download after payment.

Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.54 MB
Pages: 241
Author: Carolyn Herbst Lewis
ISBN: 9780807834251, 0807834254
Language: English
Year: 2010
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Prescription For Heterosexuality Sexual Citizenship In The Cold War Era 1st Edition Carolyn Herbst Lewis by Carolyn Herbst Lewis 9780807834251, 0807834254 instant download after payment.

In this lively and engaging work, Carolyn Lewis explores how medical practitioners, especially family physicians, situated themselves as the guardians of Americans' sexual well-being during the early years of the Cold War. She argues that many doctors viewed their patients' sexual habits as more than an issue of personal health. They believed that a satisfying sexual relationship between heterosexual couples with very specific attributes and boundaries was the foundation of a successful marriage, a fundamental source of happiness in the American family, and a crucial building block of a secure nation. Drawing on hundreds of articles and editorials in medical journals as well as other popular and professional literature, Lewis traces how medical professionals defined and reinforced heterosexuality in the mid-twentieth century, giving certain heterosexual desires and acts a veritable stamp of approval while labeling others as unhealthy or deviant. Lewis links their prescriptive treatment to Cold War anxieties about sexual norms, gender roles, and national security. Doctors of the time, Lewis argues, believed that "unhealthy" sexual acts, from same-sex desires to female-dominant acts, could cause personal and marital disaster; in short, says Lewis, they were "un-American."

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