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188888

Disciplinary interventions and resistances around "safer sex"

Martin Mitchell

pp. 139-159

Abstract

The recent interest in the relationship between the body and society in sociology has developed alongside an increased scrutiny of the construction and impact of social policies in many areas of health and social care. These developments have opened up the possibility of critically re-examining debates about the nature of subjectivity, while also attempting to reach an understanding of the ways in which state institutions actively intervene to shape and discipline our bodily practices and sense of self.

Publication details

Published in:

Ellis Kathryn, Dean Hartley, Campling Jo (2000) Social policy and the body: transitions in corporeal discourse. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 139-159

DOI: 10.1057/9780230377530_8

Full citation:

Mitchell Martin (2000) „Disciplinary interventions and resistances around "safer sex"“, In: K. Ellis, H. Dean & J. Campling (eds.), Social policy and the body, Dordrecht, Springer, 139–159.