Content area

Abstract

In the twenty-first century, technology is not so easily divorced from the human body. Viagra, the blockbuster drug hailed as the "magic erection pill," exemplifies the increasingly accepted technologically-enhanced body. After a history of medical experts applying technology to women's bodies in times of weakness, male bodies are now deemed in need of treatment. As male bodies digress from "normal" (erect and penetrating) sexuality, techno-scientific advances promise to "fix" the problem, and thus the patriarchal "machine." Thus, Viagra is both a material and cultural technology producing and reshaping gender and sexuality under the guise of techno-scientific progress. Drawing on my own ethnographic data, I explore the use and circulation of techno-scientific advancement and inevitability discourses and the ways in which masculinity and heterosexuality are reproduced, as well as contested, critiqued, and reshaped by those who prescribe, dispense, market, and/or use Viagra. Finally, I argue that Viagra is currently being understood and employed as a "tool" to avert or treat masculinity "in crisis" in the contemporary America.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Fixing broken masculinity: Viagra asa technology for the production of gender and sexuality
Author
Loe, Meika
Pages
97-125
Publication year
2001
Publication date
Summer 2001
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
10955143
e-ISSN
19364822
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
821837861
Copyright
Springer 2001