Content area

Abstract

Issue Title: Sex and Sociology: Sociological Studies of Sexuality, 1910-1978

The rejection of explanations of sexuality rooted in biological naturalism and sociological functionalism was the first step in formulating the scripting perspective on sexual conduct. The complex relation between intrapsychic experience, interpersonal relationships and the intersubjective cultural surround was the focus of what was first conceived as a social learning approach to sexuality. This was later transformed into a social constructionist framework as the intellectual context of the social studies of sexuality changed under the influence of feminism, gay and lesbian studies, self-psychology, and new developments in social and sexual theory in England and on the Continent. The scripting perspective has remained remarkably robust and stable as an explanatory framework for sexual conduct which is responsive to a globally changing historical and cultural environment.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Sexual Scripts: Origins, Influences and Changes
Author
Simon, William; Gagnon, John H
Pages
491-497
Publication year
2003
Publication date
Dec 2003
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
01620436
e-ISSN
15737837
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
758697059
Copyright
Human Sciences Press, Inc. 2003