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The History of Sexuality and Intimacy Revisited. Jeffrey Weeks Researching Socio-Cultural Change Research Methods Festival, Oxford 3 July 2008. The Importance of Being Historical. We live history and are in the midst of a living history
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The History of Sexuality and Intimacy Revisited Jeffrey Weeks Researching Socio-Cultural Change Research Methods Festival, Oxford 3 July 2008
The Importance of Being Historical • We live history and are in the midst of a living history • Analysis of recent socio-cultural change is done by people who have and are living it • One person’s reflexivity is another person’s bias or ideological fixation • Sexuality and intimacy subject to the most observable and dramatic change • But a uniquely contested history
Traps and Pitfalls • The temptations of whiggery From repression to light Problems with liberationism The perils of progressivism • Declinism and its discontents The myth of a golden age A ‘broken society’ The ‘social deficit’ • Nothing has really changed Feminist pessimism Queer critiques Neo-liberalism
The Historical Problem • Understanding the ‘great transition’ • Overdetermination of the past and present • Understanding the different languages and meanings of the past, and the multiple languages of the present • Whose history? • Key moments • The proliferation of sexual stories
Fateful Moments Disrupting the narrative: Times when events come together in such a way that an individual stands, as it were, at a crossroads in his (sic) existence… There are, of course, fateful moments in the history of collectives as well as in the lives of individuals. They are phases at which things are wrenched out of joint, where a given state of affairs is suddenly altered by a few key events (Giddens 1991: 113).
Example 1: The Wolfenden Moment • Chasing the perverse – post-Imperial blues • Redefining the private and the public • The ‘Wolfenden strategy’: ‘consent and control’ • The late 1960s: the permissive moment • Acting as if….. • ‘Everyday experiments’
Example 2: The Thatcher Moment • Victorian values and their limitation • Economic individualism and social conservatism • Individualization, individualism, individuality • New forms of social capital • Thatcherism’s failure: the case of section 28 • The unfinished revolution • ‘Well grubbed, old mole’
Example 3: Liberalism by Stealth • Sex reform under ‘New Labour’ • Live and let love • Responding to the zeitgeist • ‘New families’ • Civil partnerships and communitarianism • A very British compromise • Myths of neo-liberalism • New taxonomies of regulation and recognition
Thinking about past, present and future • Expect the unexpected – anticipate unintended consequences • Assume that sexuality and intimate life will remain the focus of division and conflict • Agency and the grass roots revolution • The democratisation of sexual and intimate life