TY - JOUR
T1 - Visual Histories of Sex
T2 - Collecting, Curating, Archiving
AU - Bauer, Heike
AU - Pappademos, Melina
AU - Sutton, Katie
AU - Tucker, Jennifer
PY - 2022/1
Y1 - 2022/1
N2 - Increased access to visual archives and the proliferation of digitized images related to sexuality have led a growing number of scholars in recent years to place images and visual practices at the center of critical historical inquiries of sexual desire, subjectivity, and embodiment. At the same time, new critical histories of sexual science serve both to expand the temporal and geographical frames for investigating the historical relationships of sex and visual production, and to generate new lines of inquiry and reshape visual studies more broadly. The contributors to this issue invite us to ask: What new questions and challenges for the study of sex and sexual science are posed by critical studies of the visual? How are new visual methodologies that focus on archives changing the contours of historical knowledge about sex and sexuality? What—and where—are new methodologies still needed? “Visual Archives of Sex” aims to illuminate current research that centers visual media in the history of sexuality and that interrogates contemporary historiographies.
AB - Increased access to visual archives and the proliferation of digitized images related to sexuality have led a growing number of scholars in recent years to place images and visual practices at the center of critical historical inquiries of sexual desire, subjectivity, and embodiment. At the same time, new critical histories of sexual science serve both to expand the temporal and geographical frames for investigating the historical relationships of sex and visual production, and to generate new lines of inquiry and reshape visual studies more broadly. The contributors to this issue invite us to ask: What new questions and challenges for the study of sex and sexual science are posed by critical studies of the visual? How are new visual methodologies that focus on archives changing the contours of historical knowledge about sex and sexuality? What—and where—are new methodologies still needed? “Visual Archives of Sex” aims to illuminate current research that centers visual media in the history of sexuality and that interrogates contemporary historiographies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85130289579&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1215/01636545-9397002
DO - 10.1215/01636545-9397002
M3 - Article
SN - 0163-6545
VL - 2022
SP - 1
EP - 18
JO - Radical History Review
JF - Radical History Review
IS - 142
ER -