An interdisciplinary conference convened by John Forrester (University of Cambridge)
6-7 September 2013 at CRASSH
By the end of the twentieth century, a combination of profound social changes and major techno-scientific innovations had reorganized ‘the sexual field’ into three separate systems. The early twentieth century distinction between sexual pleasure and reproduction was supplemented by one between biological ‘sex’ and social ‘gender’, in which the figures of ‘the transsexual’ and ‘transgender’ were central, with the category of ‘gender’ eventually peeling off to have an entirely different historical destiny. While the phrase ‘Sexual Revolution’ once evoked changes in sexual mores and contraceptive practices of the 1960s and after, this ‘revolution’ may have been part of a larger reconfiguration of the pleasure-, gender- and reproductive-systems – the last of which became an autonomous medical industry assisting reproduction by the end of the century. This conference will allow a comparison of the political and ethical debates over medical and cultural innovations in ‘sex’, ‘gender’ and ‘reproduction’ over the period 1950-1970.
Speakers include Dagmar Herzog (City University of New York), Gert Hekma (University of Amsterdam), Richard Green (Imperial College London), Illana Lowy (Centre de Recherche Medicine CNRS), Naomi Pfeffer (University College London), Lisa Downing (University of Birmingham) and Joanna Bourke (Birbeck University of London).
