Buch, Englisch, 192 Seiten, Format (B × H): 240 mm x 162 mm, Gewicht: 466 g
A Continuation of the Autonomy/Paternalism Debate
Buch, Englisch, 192 Seiten, Format (B × H): 240 mm x 162 mm, Gewicht: 466 g
Reihe: Routledge Advances in Disability Studies
ISBN: 978-1-138-62824-3
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Utilizing rare empirical data, Foucault's theory of power and Kristeva’s concept of abjection, this work shows that many non-disabled people – including family members – hold ambivalent attitudes towards people with visible disabilities expressing their sexuality. Through a careful examination of the autonomy/paternalism debate this is the first book to provide an original, provocative and philosophically compelling analysis to argue that where necessary, facilitated sex with prostitutes should be included as part of a new regime of care to ensure that sexual needs are met.
Intellectual Disability and the Right to a Sexual Life is essential reading for scholars, students and policy-makers with an interest in philosophy, sociology, political theory, social work, disability studies and sex studies. It will also be of interest to anybody who is a parent or a sibling of an adult with an intellectual disability and those with an interest in human rights and disability more generally.
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Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction, Chapter 1. The who, the what and the why, 1.1. Research Methodology, 1.2. The contested politics of researching disability, 1.3. My Conceptual Framework, 1.4. Ideological affiliations, Chapter 2. The Autonomy/Paternalism Debate, 2.1. Introduction, 2.2 The Autonomy/Paternalism Debate, 2.3 Historical and Cultural Discourses of Sexuality, 2.4 The focus on genital sex explained, 2.5 The dangerous discourse of sexual expression, 2.6 Liberal society and changing sexual mores, 2.7 The parental perspective, 2.8 Facilitated sex, 2.9 Conceptualising disability, 2.10 My conceptual framework, Chapter 3. Research Findings and Analysis: The Parental Perspective, 3.1 Introduction, 3.2 Theme 1: Parental perception of what it means to be normal - the rationale behind the paternalistic regime of care, 3.3 Theme 2: Parental refutation of the charge that their regime of care is to 'blame' for the celibate lives led by some of the adult children with Down syndrome, 3.4 Theme 3: Parental view of their adult sons and daughters with Down syndrome as sexual beings – and the desire that they find a girlfriend/boyfriend, 3.5 Theme 4: The privileging of ‘loving’ boyfriend/girlfriend relationships over sexual expression for its own sake: the gender bias in action, 3.6 Interviews with Adults with Down Syndrome, 3.7 Theme 1: The desire to move out of the parental home, 3.8 Theme 2: The desire to have more control over how their leisure time is spent, 3.9 Theme 3: The role played by the mother as reluctant jailor, 3.10 Theme 4: The desire to have a boyfriend/girlfriend, 3.11 Theme 5: What one does in a boyfriend/girlfriend relationship?, 3.12 Theme 6: The desire to be normal – the abject in action, 3.13 Analysis of the Findings, Chapter 4. Third Rail Sexual Politics under Scrutiny: The Question of Faciliated Sex, 4.1 Focus group findings, 4.2 Focus group analysis, Chapter 5. A modest proposal regarding the normalisation of facilitated sex, 5.1 Introduction, 5.2 Ideological Critiques in form and content, 5.3 The Three Faces of Power Debate, 5.4 Conclusion, Chapter 6. Conclusions, References