Review of "Violence, Prejudice and Sexuality" by Stephen Tomsen (Routledge, New York and London, 2009)


Autoria(s): Dwyer, Angela E.
Data(s)

2012

Resumo

Tomsen’s book Violence, Prejudice and Sexuality engages with important questions about sexuality and anti homosexual sentiment that criminologists have grappled with for some time. Tomsen’s work refines these questions in the context of essentialism, and notes how this concept has enabled only very specific ways of thinking about and analysing violence, prejudice, and sexuality. Indeed, thinking about the nexus between these three concepts are now almost taken for granted. As Tomsen demonstrates in his discussion of historical understandings of sexual desire, although social constructionism and queer perspectives have challenged essentialist notions of sexuality, research has in many respects upheld a binary understanding of heterosexuality as normal and homosexuality as abnormal. Interestingly, essentialist binaries like this have been conveniently employed in more recent times when activists align with minority status to gain basic human rights. While no one could deny the importance of access to rights and justice, Tomsen notes the danger inherent in arguments like this that draw on essentialism. He argues we are working through similar dichotomies of heterosexuality as normal and homosexuality as abnormal set up in very early research on sexual desire. The key difference now is that, in the rush towards public and political citizenship, ‘heterosexuals are recast as “perpetrators” and homosexuals as “victims”’ (Tomsen 2009: 16). Violence, Prejudice and Sexuality importantly notes this is no less an essentialist dichotomy and no less divisive....

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/49281/

Publicador

Institute of Criminology Press

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/49281/4/49281a.pdf

http://sydney.edu.au/law/criminology/journal/back_issues.shtml

Dwyer, Angela E. (2012) Review of "Violence, Prejudice and Sexuality" by Stephen Tomsen (Routledge, New York and London, 2009). Current Issues in Criminal Justice, 23(3), pp. 481-482.

Direitos

Copyright 2012 Institute of Criminology Press

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Justice

Palavras-Chave #160200 CRIMINOLOGY
Tipo

Review