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'It is Like You Have Leprosy': Representations of Single Women in Delhi, South AsiaCaulfield, T. M. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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'It is Like You Have Leprosy': Representations of Single Women in Delhi, South AsiaCaulfield, T. M. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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'It is Like You Have Leprosy': Representations of Single Women in Delhi, South AsiaCaulfield, T. M. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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'It is Like You Have Leprosy': Representations of Single Women in Delhi, South AsiaCaulfield, T. M. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Male Convict Sexuality in the Penal Colonies of Australia, 1820-1850Gilchrist, Catie January 2004 (has links)
This thesis explores the moral and sexual anxieties produced by the transportation of male convicts to the penal colonies of Australia. My aims are twofold. First, this study argues that male sexuality lay at the heart of penal and colonial political discourse. The moral anxieties this both reflected and produced directly informed the penal administration of the convict population. This was implicit in the ways that convict bodies were ordered, surveilled, disciplined and accommodated. In this analysis the sexual and behavioural management of male prisoners is considered to be a fundamental dynamic within contemporary perceptions of criminal reformation. Second, this thesis examines the ways that these moral concerns permeated the wider colonial society. Free British settlers took their cultural cargo with them to the colonies. In the context of the penal colonies, they also had to negotiate the specific cultural and social implications of transportation. The moral concerns of colonial society were often played out around the politics of imperial transportation. This is examined through a consideration of the cultural meanings of colonial discourse and the many tensions that lay beneath it. During the slow transition from penal colony to respectable free society, colonists utilised and manipulated their moral and cultural anxieties in a number of political ways. This thesis argues that the moral and sexual anxieties of colonial society were both real and imagined. They informed a variety of discourses that linked the colonial periphery with the metropolitan centre in a relationship that was reciprocal but also antagonistic.
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Divine fluidity: shifts of gender and sexuality in conservative Christian communitiesBurgess, Sarah Stewart 24 April 2009 (has links)
This thesis draws on ethnographic research from three communities of conservative Christian women who find empowerment and agency through their religious traditions. Two communities are politically active, outspoken women who also believe strongly in "traditional" roles for women, and one community idealizes conservative standards of sexuality while accepting women who work as sex workers. These women did not view their positions as contradictory, rather, they used religious beliefs and religious practices to enact, embody or explain their complex genders and sexualities. This thesis draws on ethnographic, feminist and queer theories while showcasing the diversity within a movement largely believed to be monolithic. The researcher aims to encourage more dialogue between liberal feminists and conservative Christians.
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Therapists' Attitudes, Knowledge, Comfort, and Willingness to Discuss Sexual Topics with ClientsMoore, Byron J. 15 June 2018 (has links)
<p> Empirical literature indicated that marriage and family therapists are not comfortable discussing sexual topics with clients. The purpose of this cross-sectional correlational study was to examine the variables that may influence or predict a therapist’s willingness to discuss sexual topics with clients. The research questions focused on understanding the predictive relationship between the independent variables of therapists’ (a) attitudes, (b) knowledge, (c) training, (d) supervision experience, (e) clinical experience, (f) sex, (g) age, (h) strength of religion, (i) sexual orientation, (j) practice experience, (k) practice setting, and (l) graduate specialization, and the dependent variables of therapists’ (a) willingness to discuss sexual topics with clients and (b) comfort discussing sexual topics with clients. Bowenian theory provided the framework for the study. Survey data were collected from 90 state-licensed marriage and family therapists in the United States. Findings from correlational and stepwise logistic regression analyses indicated that supervision experience was the strongest predictor of a therapist’s willingness to discuss sexual topics with a client. The second strongest predictor was clinical experience. Therapists’ attitudes and knowledge were not predictors of comfort or willingness to discuss sexual topics with clients. Increasing the number of clinical and supervisory opportunities for marriage and family therapists may increase their willingness to discuss sexual topics and may decrease the number of clients who cannot receive help, which may improve quality of life for therapists, clients, and their families. </p><p>
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Characteristics of Individuals Who Participate in Autoerotic Asphyxiation Practices| An Exploratory StudyChapple, Lauren Elise 03 October 2018 (has links)
<p> The set of behaviors known as Autoerotic Asphyxiation (AeA) have been studied, by contemporary scientific standards, for the better part of sixty years. Within that time, an inadequate amount of research has been completed on a far too narrow sample of the population, namely those who have died from the practice. AeA as a practice has been understudied to this point despite statistics that would note the potential for an unknown number of individuals to currently be practicing these behaviors. There is a paucity of both quantitative and qualitative data about living AeA practitioners. The present study uses Sex Positivity to acknowledge and approach the Kink community from a position of social justice, wellness, and resilience within the community (Burnes, Singh, & Witherspoon, 2017). Sex Positivity, as utilized in the present study, assumes validity and wellness in the varying forms of pleasure-seeking behaviors noted above that include concepts of consent, mutual respect, and communication between partners (Queen & Schimel, 1997; Richards & Barker, 2013). Due to the aforementioned general lack of extant data on oxygen restriction enthusiasts, the present study focuses primarily upon identifying similarities and differences between living AeA and Airplay with a Partner (APP) enthusiasts. The study attempted to identify demographics, methods, preparations, and practices of AeA and APP. The study identified several demographic information pieces, which stand in contrast to extant literature. </p><p>
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An Exploration And Comparison Of Indicators Of Marital Sexuality As Predictors Of Marital DisruptionDzara, Kristina 01 January 2009 (has links)
Little is known about how marital sexual interaction influences eventual marital disruption, despite research in various disciplines examining the sex lives of the married. This relatively unexplored area compels sociological inquiry, since most Americans will marry, yet about 44 percent of all marriages are expected to end in divorce. Surprisingly, no one has posed the question: Does frequent, satisfying, and agreeable marital sexual interaction help to sustain a marriage? Further, do these indicators work separately or together to influence marital disruption? With panel data from the Marriage Matters Panel Survey of Newlywed Couples, 1998 - 2004, I utilize these three indicators (frequency, satisfaction, and agreement) to assess this question, as well as how the indicators of marital sexuality influence each other. The results provide evidence that the influence of marital sexuality on marital disruption is limited. However, interesting gender nuances appear and indicate that husband's satisfaction with physical intimacy early in marriage has a consistent positive effect on whether or not the couple will experience a marital disruption.
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Adolescent Sexuality| A Curriculum for Social WorkersMorra, Mary 03 July 2018 (has links)
<p> Social work has not sufficiently addressed positive adolescent sexuality in its scholarship and education. This curriculum utilizes lecture, small and large group discussion, case vignettes, role-play and writing activities to increase social workers’ comfort, knowledge and skills about adolescent sexual well-being. This enhances the ability of social workers to address sexuality among adolescents using a strength-based framework. The curriculum provides implications for social work policy, practice and research. </p><p>
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