Technologies of Sexiness: Sex, Identity, and Consumer Culture
Technologies of Sexiness: Sex, Identity, and Consumer Culture
determines feminine success (and failure). Informed by older constructs of privilege such as class, sexuality, race and (dis)ability, this version of sexiness also constrains by folding contemporary femininity back into previous panics about youth, excess, bad consumption, and appropriate feminine
behavior In Technologies of Sexiness, Adrienne Evans and Sarah Riley identify how current understandings of sexiness in public life and academic discourse have produced a doubled stagnation, cycling around old debates without forward momentum. Developing a theoretical and methodological framework, they
expand on the notion of a technology of sexiness. They ask what happens and what is lost when people make sense of themselves within the complexities and contradictions of consumer-oriented constructs of sexiness. How do these discourses come to transform the self? This book provides a framework for understanding how women make sense of their sexual identities in the context of a feminization of sexual consumerism. The authors analyze material collected with two groups of women: the pleasure pursuers and functioning feminists, who broadly occupy positions
across the pre- and post-Thatcher eras, and the changes brought about by the feminist movement. As one of the first book-length empirical studies to explore age-related femininities in the context of what sexiness means today, the authors develop a series of insights into various technologies of
the self through analyses of space, nostalgia, and claims to authentic sexiness.
Author: Adrienne Evans, Sarah Riley
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 08/29/2014
Pages: 184
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.85lbs
Size: 9.30h x 6.10w x 0.70d
ISBN: 9780199914760
About the Author
Adrienne Evans is a Senior Lecturer in Media at Coventry University. Her main research interest is in exploring women's contemporary sexual identities. Her current work continues in contemporary gender relations and the use of creative methods in research and teaching. She has published this work in the European Journal of Women's Studies, Journal of Gender Studies, Men and Masculinities, Teaching in Higher Education, and Feminism and Psychology.
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