1st Edition

Endowed Regulating the Male Sexed Body

By Michael Thomson Copyright 2008
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    Feminist legal scholars and health care lawyers have long engaged with law’s responses to the female reproductive body, especially on what the legal regulation of women’s reproductive lives can tell us about the broader relationship between law and gender. Acknowledging this work and building upon it, Endowed considers the interaction of law and ideas of male reproductivity. In particular, it seeks to uncover what these regulatory moments can tell us about contemporary ideas and ideals of masculinity and the male sexed body.

    Spanning topics such as male circumcision and the regulation of state access to Viagra, the book uncovers recurring motifs that define masculinity and the male body in the legal imagination. In looking to these understandings the book engages with broader questions regarding the relationship between law and gender and between masculinity and social organization.

    1. Masculinity, Reproductivity and Law  2. Short Changed?: The Law and Ethics of Male Circumcision  3. Reproductivity, the Workplace and the Gendering of the Body (Politic)  4. Viagra Nation: Sex and Prescribing Familial Masculinity  5. Regulating (for) Sperm Donor Identity  6. A Question of Sex?: Sport, the Healthy Body and Masculinity  7. Conclusions: Perverse Fantasy and Bodily Possibility

    Biography

    Michael Thomson is Professor of Law, Culture, and Society in the School of Law, Keele University.