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Book Summary of Passionate Modernity: Sexuality, Class and Consumption in India Combining historical and ethnographic analysis, this book deals with the making of the heterosexual imagination from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present in the Indian context.
This unique book uses methods from anthropology, cultural studies and history to explore the making of modern cultures of sexuality in India. It provides an analysis of the sexual and domestic politics of the period by focusing on the vast corpus of publications and journals on sexology from the 1920s to the 1940s, and links Indian activities with those in other parts of the world. The author analyzes material that has thus far been outside the purview of scholarly studies, namely, a footpath pornographya (TM), magazines such as Sexology Mirror (in Hindi), womena (TM)s magazines dealing explicitly with sex and sexuality.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Sexual Swarajya, Debased Muslims and Uncontrollable Tribals: Subcontinental Sex Questions 2. Instruction for Utopia: `Sane Sex Living`, Eugenics, and the Making of a Transnational Modernity in the Early 20th Century 3. The Idea of Lata Mangeshkar: Hindu Sexuality, the Girl Child and Heterosexual Desire in the Time of the Five Year Plans 4. The Masculinity of Dis-Location: Commodities, the Metropolis and the Sex-Clinics of Delhi and Mumbai 5. Pedestrian Desires: Footpath Pornography and the Aesthetics of Fluid Spaces 6. Threshold and Surplus Subjectivities: Sexology Darpan Makes Meanings in Hari Nagar 7. Among the Veg: Tacos and Baby Pizzas, Shekhar and Monica Make Silent, Unsatisfactory Love: Domesticating Sexuality 8. "A Rainbow of Wishes": Tupperware, Female Sexuality, Home, and the World isbn 9780415424158
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Pages : 397
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