Lexington Books
Pages: 164
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-2535-9 • Hardback • June 2011 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7391-2536-6 • Paperback • June 2011 • $54.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-4802-0 • eBook • July 2011 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Jacqueline M. Martinez is associate professor of communicology at Arizona State University, Phoenix.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Acknowledgements
Chapter 3 List of Figures
Chapter 4 List of Tables
Chapter 5 Chapter 1: An Introduction to Sexuality as Subject Matter
Chapter 6 Chapter 2: Our Lived Experience as the Subject of Research
Chapter 7 Chapter 3: Historicity and Temporality
Chapter 8 Chapter 4: Semiotics in Communicology
Chapter 9 Chapter 5: Phenomenology in Communicology
Chapter 10 Chapter 6: Semiotic Phenomenology
Chapter 11 Chapter 7: Semiotic Phenomenology Applied
Chapter 12 Chapter 8: Cultural Ethics and Personal Obligations
Chapter 13 Bibliography
Chapter 14 Index
Chapter 15 About the Author
Theoretically sophisticated and grounded in the lived realities of sexual experience, Communicative Sexualities provides readers with important tools to examine and understand their own embodied sexualities within larger social, cultural, and political contexts. The volume is a significant contribution to the study of sexualities in the communication discipline.
— Gust A. Yep, San Francisco State University
It is rare to come across a genuinely daring book. Communicative Sexualities is just that. Martinez, one of the most creative theorists of communication, addresses problems across the communicative life of sexuality, its practices and orientation of the sexual self, with breathtaking honesty, insight, and care. Her treatment, intrepid and erudite, makes bare what many of us paradoxically see yet fail to see. Born out of pedagogical communication, this book is a major contribution to communicology, phenomenology, queer theory, and the continued quest for human understanding—a must read for anyone interested in these areas of study.
— Lewis R. Gordon, professor of philosophy and Africana studies, University of Connecticut
It is exciting to see this valuable new textbook on sexuality and communication from Jacqueline Martinez. The central role of communication in the interrelationships of the personal and cultural is highlighted throughout and the concluding chapter guides the reader to a deeper recognition of the individual, interpersonal, and societal implications of ethical communication of and in sexual experience vs. the violence of communication that is unethical. It is a message we should not ignore.
— Karen E. Lovaas, San Francisco State University