The Man Question
Data(s) |
2000
|
---|---|
Resumo |
What happens when sexuality is banned from IAT public discourse? This book shows how everyday sexual behaviour and morality were — or were not — affected by the Soviet censorship on sexuality. Based on autobiographies written by ordinary people from St. Petersburg, it presents the loves and lives of three generations. It describes perceptions of love, the life course of the Russian family, transmissions of sexual knowledge, informal and illegal practices and contrasting subcultures. By posing the 'man question', Anna Rotkirch argues that the postsocialist transformation has centred on the Russian man. By contrast, one of the strongest continuities in the Russian gender system concerns the ways of mothering. |
Identificador |
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/26431 951-45-9239-5 0356-1267 |
Idioma(s) |
fi |
Publicador |
Uni of helsinki, department of Social Policy |
Relação |
1/2000 |
Fonte |
Anna Rotkirch, The Man Question Loves and Lives in Late 20th Century Russia. University of Helsinki Department of Social Policy, Research Reports 1/2000. 316 p. Helsinki 2000. |
Tipo |
Book |