01861cam a22003258i 4500001001300000003000600013007000300019008004100022020002600063020002300089035004100112050002500153100003400178245013100212246002200343260004100365300001100406490002800417500003200445500004100477500002000518505032800538520045700866650002601323700002001349830002901369942001201398952011001410999001501520on1140114429OCoLCta210520r20201978enk 001 0 eng d a9780241385982 (pbk.)  a0241385989 (pbk.)  a(OCoLC)1140114429z(OCoLC)1117626818 aHQ12b.F68 2020 V. 11 aFoucault, Michel,d1926-1984.14aThe history of sexuality.nVolume 1,pThe will to knowledge /cMichel Foucault ; translated from the French by Robert Hurley. 10aWill to knowledge aLondon : bPenguin Classics, c2020. a168 p.1 aPenguin modern classics aTranslated from the French. aReprint. Originally published: 1978. aIncludes index.0 aPart one. We "Other Victorians" -- Part two. The repressive hypothesis -- 1. The incitement to discourse -- 2. The perverse implantation -- Part three. Scientia sexualis -- Part four. The deployment of sexuality -- 1. Objective -- 2. Method -- 3. Domain -- 4. Periodization -- Part five. Right of death and power over life. aWe talk about sex more and more, but are we more liberated? The first part of Michel Foucault's landmark account of our evolving attitudes in the west shows how the nineteenth century, far from suppressing sexuality, led to an explosion of discussion about sex as a separate sphere of life for study and examination. As a result, he argues, we are making a science of sex which is devoted to the analysis of desire rather than the increase of pleasure. 4aSex customsxHistory.1 aHurley, Robert. aPenguin modern classics. 2lcccBK 00104070aPNLIBbPNLIBcGENd2021-06-17oHQ12 .F68 2020 V. 1pPNLIB21062652r2021-06-17w2021-06-17yBK c2839d2839