![]() ![]() Luker, a University of California Berkeley sociologist and author (Abortion and the Politics of Motherhood), gingerly examines the issues of sex education that divide communities along political lines or between the competing visions of sex as pleasure versus sex as danger. Her unexpected conclusions make it impossible to look at the intersections of the private and the political in the same way. ![]() In doing so, Luker also traces the origins of sex education from the turn-of-the-century hygienist movement to the marriage-obsessed 1950s and the sexual and gender upheavals of the 1960s. ![]() "The drama of this book comes from watching the exceptionally thoughtful Luker try to figure out" (Judith Shulevitz, New York Times Book Review). For these parents, the question of how their children should be taught about sex cuts far deeper than politics, religion, or even friendship. ![]() "It is difficult to imagine a juicier subject, or a more thoughtful, fluent, trustworthy guide for its exploration."-San Francisco ChronicleĪ chronicle of the two decades that noted sociologist Kristin Luker spent following parents in four America communities engaged in a passionate war of ideas and values, When Sex Goes to School explores a conflict with stakes that are deceptively simple and painfully personal. ![]()
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