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The course of gay and lesbian lives : social and psychoanalytic perspectives / Bertram J. Cohler and Robert M. Galatzer-Levy.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 2000Description: xviii, 537 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0226113035
  • 9780226113036
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306.766 21
LOC classification:
  • RC451.4.G39 C64 2000
Contents:
Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Part One. Homosexuality and Psychological Inquiry -- 1. Gay and Lesbian Lives and Psychoanalytic Inquiry -- 2. Perspectives on the Study of Sexual Orientation -- Part Two. The Question of Origins and the Course of Psychosocial Development -- 3. Biology, Sexuality, and the Foundation of Human Sexual Orientation -- 4. Storied Accounts and Psychoanalytic Understandings of the Childhoods of Gay Men and Women -- 5. Adolescence and Youth: Realizing Gay and Lesbian Sexual Identity -- 6. Lesbian and Gay Lives across the Adult YearsPart Three: Gender Orientation and Issues in Psychoanalytic Intervention -- 7. Sexual Orientation and Personal Distress: Shame, Stigma, and Homophobia -- 8. Sexual Orientation and Evaluation of Personal Adjustment -- 9. Psychodynamics of Sexual Orientation -- 10. "Ego-Dystonic" Homosexuality and the Issue of Reparative Therapy -- 11. Psychoanalytic Intervention among Gay Men and Women -- 12. Self, Sexual Identity, and the Psychoanalytic Situation -- Conclusion: Toward a Developmental Perspective on Gay and Lesbian Lives.
Summary: "We live in a society obsessed with tracing the cause of homosexuality. Is there a gene that can be identified? Or do the origins lie outside of biology in the cultural context of childhood or adolescence? Most importantly, should we care about any of these questions?Drawing on their own work with gays, lesbians, and bisexuals as well as other pertinent studies, psychoanalysts Bertram J. Cohler and Robert Galatzer-Levy have written a groundbreaking work that examines how psychological development and clinical intervention as well as social and historical change across generations contribute to how we think about sexuality. The authors argue that there is little support for assuming that homosexuality has a biological basis. Recognizing the many pathways that lead to same-gender sexual orientation, the authors conclude that the cause is much less important than understanding the meaning of being homosexual. They consider the destructive nature of an intolerant society that fosters so-called conversion psychotherapy and stress the importance of helping to rebuild a sense of coherence and personal integrity among homosexuals."--Publisher description.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 431-511) and index.

Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Part One. Homosexuality and Psychological Inquiry -- 1. Gay and Lesbian Lives and Psychoanalytic Inquiry -- 2. Perspectives on the Study of Sexual Orientation -- Part Two. The Question of Origins and the Course of Psychosocial Development -- 3. Biology, Sexuality, and the Foundation of Human Sexual Orientation -- 4. Storied Accounts and Psychoanalytic Understandings of the Childhoods of Gay Men and Women -- 5. Adolescence and Youth: Realizing Gay and Lesbian Sexual Identity -- 6. Lesbian and Gay Lives across the Adult YearsPart Three: Gender Orientation and Issues in Psychoanalytic Intervention -- 7. Sexual Orientation and Personal Distress: Shame, Stigma, and Homophobia -- 8. Sexual Orientation and Evaluation of Personal Adjustment -- 9. Psychodynamics of Sexual Orientation -- 10. "Ego-Dystonic" Homosexuality and the Issue of Reparative Therapy -- 11. Psychoanalytic Intervention among Gay Men and Women -- 12. Self, Sexual Identity, and the Psychoanalytic Situation -- Conclusion: Toward a Developmental Perspective on Gay and Lesbian Lives.

"We live in a society obsessed with tracing the cause of homosexuality. Is there a gene that can be identified? Or do the origins lie outside of biology in the cultural context of childhood or adolescence? Most importantly, should we care about any of these questions?Drawing on their own work with gays, lesbians, and bisexuals as well as other pertinent studies, psychoanalysts Bertram J. Cohler and Robert Galatzer-Levy have written a groundbreaking work that examines how psychological development and clinical intervention as well as social and historical change across generations contribute to how we think about sexuality. The authors argue that there is little support for assuming that homosexuality has a biological basis. Recognizing the many pathways that lead to same-gender sexual orientation, the authors conclude that the cause is much less important than understanding the meaning of being homosexual. They consider the destructive nature of an intolerant society that fosters so-called conversion psychotherapy and stress the importance of helping to rebuild a sense of coherence and personal integrity among homosexuals."--Publisher description.

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