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The Lutheran World Federation released Understanding the Gift of Communion in 2014 to allow churches who hold differing views on homosexuality to remain in fellowship with one another. This paper explores how the churches in the Global South who do not accept homosexuality are considered "colonialistic" related to socio-ethical concerns. Published in the Journal of Lutheran Mission Collver, Albert B. “Colonialism in the Global South: The Imperialism of Western Sexual Ethics.” Journal of Lutheran Mission 3, no. 1 (April 2016): 34–39. http://blogs.lcms.org/2016/journal-of-lutheran-mission-april-2016
This course examines gender, sex, and sexuality as powerful forces in people's lives that are loaded with cultural significance. In this class, we will explore the construction of gender and sexuality both in the United States and international contexts by asking some of the following questions: How has contemporary anthropological theory shaped the ways we think about gender and sexuality? Why is the regulation of sexuality such an important component for maintaining certain forms of social hierarchy both in the US and abroad? How do international differences and inequalities manifest in understandings of gender and sexuality around the world? and How does sexuality intersect with race, gender and class in various cultural contexts? We will address these questions by looking at both obvious and less visible dimensions of power, culture, gender, and sexuality. Students should leave the course with an increased understanding of the historical development of gender and sexuality, as well as understand these concepts beyond " normative " definitions. Specifically, students should engage with the ways sexuality intersects with gender, race, class, religion, location and other forms of social distinction or exclusion. Course Objectives Students will be able to: 1. identify and explain key terms that are central to an anthropological understanding of sexuality 2. relate sexuality to topics of cultural and social diversity 3. understand relationships between sexuality, gender, class, race, and other forms of difference 4. relate issues in sexuality studies with power relations, ideology, and social institutions 5. apply key themes, theories, and approaches of anthropology to their own analysis
A history of colonialism has had an effect on the cultures of the majority of the globe, and this effect is just as evident in the modern perception of gender roles and the enforced gender binary as it is in other more oft aspects of culture, such as language and religion. This paper will answer the question of what effects an extended period of colonialism and violence has had on the way that a global society views gender. This will be accomplished through the presentation of evidence that summarizes the history of gender and gender roles around the world, with examples taken from among Native Americans, Tongans, and the Igbo people of Nigeria. Cultural institutions of gender pre-colonization will be compared with the current views on gender and gender roles within the same cultures, and the cause for this difference will be elucidated. Sources including case studies, books, essays, and other research papers will be summarized, followed by an analysis of those sources and an explanation of how these sources inform the answer to the research question. This will be followed by a résumé of the results discovered throughout the research, and a discussion of these results and what they mean in the real world. The implications of all major findings will be explored, as will the potential need for continued research.
American Ethnologist, 1989
With sustained challenges to European rule in African and Asian colonies in the early 20th century, sexual prescriptions by class, race and gender became increasingly central to the politics of rule and subject to new forms of scrutiny by colonial states. Focusing on the Netherlands Indies and French Indochina, but drawing on other contexts, this article examines how the very categories of “colonizer” and “colonized” were increasingly secured through forms of sexual control which defined the common political interests of European colonials and the cultural investments by which they identified themselves. The metropolitan and colonial discourses on health, “racial degeneracy,” and social reform from this period reveal how sexual sanctions demarcated positions of power by enforcing middle-class conventions of respectability and thus the personal and public boundaries of race.[sexuality, race-thinking, hygiene, colonial cultures, Southeast Asia]
Journal of the History of Sexuality, 2005
Globalization and the Indigenous Concept of Sexuality in African Tradition: Charting a New Course for Sexual Right and Safe Society, 2018
Across the human societies, the concept of sex and sexual relationship is attached with some degree of sacredness and in some cases, can be classified as a taboo if some rules guiding such activity is ignored or violated. African societies in particular, at various degrees, have an understanding of sexual relationship as a sacrosanct factor to the image of a group, and a respectable phenomenon which every member of the group must adhere to the rules guiding them. However, the era of culture contact has left an indelible mark on the understanding and perception of sexual relationship among the African societies. This paper analyses the trends in the perception of sex and sexual relationship among the African societies, in the face of cultural globalization using, the available Ethnographic literatures and other emerging issues. Though the wave of cultural globalization is so enormous to have sunk the ships of most African Traditional Cultures, the paper suggested a common ground for the accommodation of the concept of sex and sexual relationship between the African Traditional Culture and the emerging global culture.
Psicothema, 2000
In this article we will review cultural differences in sexual behavior concerning two specific aspects: frequency of sexual intercourse in stable partners, and percentage of people who have sexual relationships with more than one person. Frequency is an index of sexual activity, and extra-marital sex (having sexual relationships with one or more people different from one's normal or stable partner) is an index of sexual permissiveness.
Análisis Político, 2023
Working Paper for Makkah Strategic Planning Project, 2010
2024
Humanities science current issues, 2021
"Prometeo" di Luigi Nono, Teatro alla Scala, Stagione 1999-2000, pp. 188-193
IEEE Communications Letters, 2021
Rheology and Deformation of the Lithosphere at Continental Margins, 2004
2016
International Journal of Serious Games, 2015
Entropy, 2016
Cell Death & Disease, 2014
Naunyn-schmiedebergs Archives of Pharmacology, 2021