
Cognitive Cultural Theorists Have Rarely Taken Up Sex, Sexuality, Or Gender Identity. When They Have Done So, They Have Often Stressed The Evolutionary Sources Of Gender Differences. In Sexual Identities, Patrick Colm Hogan Extends His Pioneering Work On Identity To Examine The Complexities Of Sex, The Diversity Of Sexuality, And The Limited Scope Of Gender. Drawing From A Diverse Body Of Literary Works, Hogan Illustrates A Rarely Drawn Distinction Between Practical Identity (the Patterns In What One Does, Thinks, And Feels) And Categorical Identity (how One Labels Oneself Or Is Categorized By Society). Building On This Distinction, He Offers A Nuanced Reformulation Of The Idea Of Social Construction, Distinguishing Ideology, Situational Determination, Shallow Socialization, And Deep Socialization. He Argues For A Meticulous Skepticism About Gender Differences And A View Of Sexuality As Evolved But Also Contingent And Highly Variable. The Variability Of Sexuality And The Near Absence Of Gender Fixity--and The Imperfect Alignment Of Practical And Categorical Identities In Both Cases--give Rise To The Social Practices That Judith Butler Refers To As Regulatory Regimes. Hogan Goes On To Explore The Cognitive And Affective Operation Of Such Regimes. Ultimately, Sexual Identities Turns To Sex And The Question Of How To Understand Transgendering In A Way That Respects The Dignity Of Transgender People, Without Reverting To Gender Essentialism.
This book investigates the intersection of cognitive cultural theory with the complexities of sex, sexuality, and gender identity. Patrick Colm Hogan, a scholar in cognitive cultural studies, utilizes a multidisciplinary framework to challenge traditional evolutionary perspectives on gender. By distinguishing between practical and categorical identities, he argues that social construction is a multifaceted process involving ideology, situational determination, and varying levels of socialization.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of cognitive cultural studies recognize this work as a significant contribution to the intersection of identity theory and social constructionism. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires a foundational understanding of cognitive theory to fully grasp the author's arguments.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190857803
ISBN-13:
9780190857806
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