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Human Sexuality: Diversity in Contemporary America, 4/e
Brian Strong, University of California, Santa Cruz
Barbara Werner Sayad, California State University, Monterey Bay
Christine DeVault, Cabrillo College
William Yarber, Indiana University

Perspectives on Human Sexuality

Sexuality Links Chapter 1

Perspectives on Human Sexuality
Links to get you started:

World Sexual Records
(http://www.sexualrecords.com/)

This web site presents some interesting statistics about sex. It's a fun web site, but also provides a baseline by which to measure some of the material presented in the textbook.
Naked Brunch: Berlin's Sexology Archive
(http://www.libidomag.com/nakedbrunch/archive/berlin.html)

"The massive site is structured to serve teachers, serious students and the constructively curious all at once."
History and Concept of Sexology
(http://www.indiana.edu/~kinsey/sexology.html)

The contents of this site are excerpted from The Birth of Sexology: A Brief History in Documents, selected and annotated by Erwin J. Haeberle.
Sex and Social Evolution
(http://biology.uindy.edu/Biol345/HUMAN%20STRATEGY/35sexuality.htm)

This web site presents an essay about how social behavior is shaped by selection.
Human Sexuality Collection
(http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/HSC/default.htm)

The Human Sexuality Collection seeks to preserve and make accessible primary sources that document historical shifts in the social construction of sexuality, with a focus on U.S. lesbian and gay history and the politics of pornography.
Society for Human Sexuality
(http://www.sexuality.org/1/sex/sexohist.html)

This web site presents a history of the study of sexuality.
A Dangerous Knowing
(http://www.jtsears.com/danger.htm)

This is a review of the book A Dangerous Knowing: Sexuality, Pedagogy and Popular Culture edited by Debbie Epstein and James T. Sears. The book presents some interesting ideas about how sexualities have been constructed in the Anglophone traditions.
Sexuality Issue in Popular Culture and Media
(http://www.siecus.org/pubs/biblio/bibs0013.html)

This annotated bibliography presents books on sexuality, popular culture and the media.
Naked News
(http://nakednews.com/)

This web site is actually presenting the news, but as the news is being presented the broadcasters take their clothes off. You might want to consider what this web site is all about and how it represents sexuality in the media and in popular culture.
A Short History of the Sexual Revolution
(http://www.people.virginia.edu/~rjh9u/sexhistory.html)

This web site presents a brief history of the sexual revolution.
Academia: So you want to study sex ...
(http://www.byz.org/~sexuality/html/body_academia.html)

This web site contains information on the many fields a student can study that would lead to a career studying sexuality.