Sex Addiction
A Short History
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Word Count
50,000 words, Guess
Page Count
200 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archivesexaddictioncrit0000reay
- ISBN-139780745670362
- ISBN-100745670369
- Library of Congress Control Number2014045194
- OCLC Control Number896806814
and 2 more
- Better World Books9780745670362
- Open LibraryOL28562908M
Classifications
- LCCRC560.S43R42 2015
- LCCRC560.S43 R42 2015
Description
The concept of sex addiction took hold in the 1980s as a product of late twentieth-century cultural anxieties. Though essentially mythical, creating a problem that need not exist, sex addiction has to be taken seriously as a phenomenon. Rarely has a socio-psychological discourse had such impact on the public imagination and proven an influential concept in academic circles, too. Its success as a purported malady lay with its medicalization, both as a self-help movement in terms of self-diagnosis, and as a rapidly growing industry of therapists treating the new disease. The media played a role in its history, first with TV, the tabloids, and the case histories of claimed celebrity victims all helping to popularize the concept, and then with the impact of the Internet. This book is a critical history of an archetypically modern sexual syndrome, an examination of the power of an idea and its social context. Reay, Attwood, and Gooder argue that this strange history of social opportunism, diagnostic amorphism, therapeutic self-interest, and popular cultural endorsement is marked by an essential social conservatism: sex addiction has become a convenient term to describe disapproved sex. It is a label without explanatory force. This book will be essential reading for those interested in sexuality studies, contemporary history, psychology, psychiatry, sociology, media studies, and studies of the Internet.
Other Editions
- Sex Addiction: A Short History
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