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A Tale of Two TechnologiesHPV Vaccination, Male Circumcision, and Sexual HealthVanderbilt University
Arizona State University This article brings insights from feminist science and technology studies to bear on recent public debates over the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, which prevents many cervical cancers, and male circumcision as potential HIV preventive. In the United States, attempts to mandate HPV vaccination have activated intense concerns about female "promiscuity," whereas talk of promoting circumcision against HIV has triggered scant anxiety about American boys sexuality. The authors show how intersections among gender, sexuality, race, and age have shaped responses to these two containment technologies—and how the technologies deployment both relies on and reproduces meanings of gender and sexuality that constitute the omnipresent "double standard." The analysis develops an original feminist sociology of containment, explicating how social relations shape the innovation, reinvention, and use of technologies to contain particular sorts of bodies, fluids, and sexual practices—by whom, under what conditions, and for what purposes.
Key Words: health medical sexuality adolescence children HIV/AIDS HPV cervical cancer
Gender & Society, Vol. 23, No. 6,
790-816 (2009) |
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