Legal battles over the censorship of birth control, literary works, and sex education materials from the late 1920s-1950s made the laws more compatible with cultural practices and public interests in sexual matters, and created a wider marketplace of ideas about sexuality.
Legal battles over the censorship of birth control, literary works, and sex education materials from the late 1920s-1950s made the laws more compatible with cultural practices and public interests in sexual matters, and created a wider marketplace of ideas about sexuality.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Brett Gary is a cultural historian and Associate Professor in the Department of Media, Culture, and Communication at New York University. Gary is the author of The Nervous Liberals: Propaganda Anxieties from World War I to the Cold War (Columbia University Press). He is a recipient of NYU's Distinguished Teaching Award, and the Steinhardt School's Teaching Excellence Award. His teaching and research interests include American cultural, legal, and political history, film and history, Hollywood film and masculinity, and censorship in American culture.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Moral Guardians and Sexual Modernists 2. Fighting for Sexual Education: Mary Ware Dennett Versus Postal Power 3. Women's Right to Sexual Pleasure: Marie Stopes Versus Customs Authority 4. The Taboo of Inversion: Radclyffe Hall and Literary Censorship 5. The Vomit School of Literature: Fighting Censorship in New York City 6. Defending Literary Genius: James Joyce's Ulysses on Trial 7. Battles for Birth Control: Margaret Sanger and the Moral Authority of Doctors 8. The Allure of the Erotic: Alfred Kinsey and Sexual Science, 1947-1957 Conclusion: From the First to the Second Sexual Revolution Epilogue: Morris Ernst's Complicated Legacy
1. Moral Guardians and Sexual Modernists 2. Fighting for Sexual Education: Mary Ware Dennett Versus Postal Power 3. Women's Right to Sexual Pleasure: Marie Stopes Versus Customs Authority 4. The Taboo of Inversion: Radclyffe Hall and Literary Censorship 5. The Vomit School of Literature: Fighting Censorship in New York City 6. Defending Literary Genius: James Joyce's Ulysses on Trial 7. Battles for Birth Control: Margaret Sanger and the Moral Authority of Doctors 8. The Allure of the Erotic: Alfred Kinsey and Sexual Science, 1947-1957 Conclusion: From the First to the Second Sexual Revolution Epilogue: Morris Ernst's Complicated Legacy
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