TY - BOOK ID - 5145257 TI - Reclaiming Sodom PY - 1994 SN - 0415907543 0415907551 PB - New York : Routledge, DB - UniCat KW - Homosexuality KW - Sexology KW - Sodomy KW - Homosexualité KW - Sexologie KW - Sodomie KW - History KW - Philosophy KW - Histoire KW - Philosophie KW - History. KW - Philosophy. KW - Homosexualité UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:5145257 AB - Within the Judeo-Christian tradition, Sodom and Gomorrah represent locales in which threats to national formation are couched in sexual terms. The biblical narrative insists on a particular social invisibility for those sexual activities not blessed by the bonds of matrimony. 'Reclaiming Sodom' surveys a number of institutions that have had an interest in perpetuating these views: the police, the state, the church and the law. The collection ranges through biblical scholarship, an investigation of the Founding Fathers' beliefs, the legal mobilization towards the category of sodomy in 18th and 19th century England, and the US Supreme Court's 1986 'Bowers vs. Hardwick' decision. Analysis is provided of the ways in which the Judeo-Christian tradition has shaped anthropological accounts of the same-sex practices of non-Western people, as well as essays on how colonial gestures have marked lesbian identity in the Carribean, and derformed narratives about the racial geography ofAIDS. 'Reclaiming Sodom' explores alternatives to the force of the Sodomitic biblical narrative in Islamic, non-western, and western traditions, and discusses the ways in which sodomy calls into question normative definitions of sexuality and gender. The collection pursues the "pleasures and dangers" of these alternatives, and takes on Proust's refusal to imagine a social movement founded on the "stigma" of Sodom. The collection examines the relations between sex/gender identities and sexual acts in important and provocative ways, and argues for the political use and usefulness of both Sodom and sodomy. 'Reclaiming Sodom' makes an important and controversial contribution to the literature on sexuality and gender, as well as the nature of sex in our culture. Contributors: Dorothy Allison, Robert Alter, Neil Bartlett, Leo Bersani, Gerald Creed, Marc Daniel, Lee Edelman, Janet E. Halley, Jonathan Ned Katz, Pierre Klossowski, RockyO'Donovan, Guy Hocquenghem, Cindy Patton, Marquis de Sade, David Shan ER -