Publication | Open Access
Bodyscapes, Biology, and Heteronormativity
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Citations
78
References
2009
Year
Queer PoliticsBody StudiesHomosexualityBiomedical BodyscapeQueer TheoryAnatomyQueer StudyMasculinitySocial SciencesDominant BodyscapeSexual CulturesGender IdentityQueer HistoryGender TheoryBioarchaeologyGender StudiesIntersectionalityTrans StudiesBiologyHumanitiesSexuality StudiesBody SizeQueer StudiesBody ImageAnthropologyHeteronormativity StudiesSexual OrientationTerm BodyscapeHuman SexualitySexology
ABSTRACT The term bodyscape encourages thinking about representation of bodies at multiple scales—from different bodies as they move through space to the microlandscape of individual bodily differences. A hegemonic bodyscape's representations tend to idealize and essentialize bodies’ differences to reinforce normative ideas about a society's socioeconomic organization. But, a dominant bodyscape is never absolute. Bodyscapes that depart from or subvert hegemonic representations may simultaneously exist. In Western society, the biomedical bodyscape predominates in scientific understandings of bodily difference. Its representation of sex differences conveys heteronormative notions about gender and sexuality. Because the biomedical bodyscape frames studies of ancient bodies, investigators need recognize how their considerations of labor divisions, familial organization, and reproduction may situate modern (hetero)sexist representations deep within antiquity. To innovate analyses of socioeconomic relations, queer theory allows scholars to interrogate human nature. Doing so produces alternative bodyscapes that represent the diversity of past peoples’ social and sexual lives. [Keywords: bodyscape, heteronormativity, queer theory, bioarchaeology, paleoanthropology]
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