Sexual Fluidity: Understanding Women's Love and Desire
by Lisa M. DiamondSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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2008-winter-reviews
EBB, FLOW - Review By Hanne Blank
WHAT TO MAKE OF COLLEGE women who are “lesbian until graduation”? Or straight married women who suddenly fall in love with other women? For that matter, what about queeridentified women— Anne Heche, anyone?— who wind up with men? Perhaps they’re really bisexual or “confused” or maybe they were simply repressed or closeted. Alarmists might imagine them victims of predatory dykes and Stockholm syndrome. Or, as University of Utah psychologist Lisa...more
WHAT TO MAKE OF COLLEGE women who are “lesbian until graduation”? Or straight married women who suddenly fall in love with other women? For that matter, what about queeridentified women— Anne Heche, anyone?— who wind up with men? Perhaps they’re really bisexual or “confused” or maybe they were simply repressed or closeted. Alarmists might imagine them victims of predatory dykes and Stockholm syndrome. Or, as University of Utah psychologist Lisa...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
women, psych geeks
Lisa Diamond is a psychologist at the University of Utah (yes, Utah) whose research reinforces the need for a paradigm shift in our understanding of sexuality. Diamond launched a longitudinal study in which 100 females (some of whom are trans) were interviewed about their sexual attractions and experiences every few years for 10 years. The result is the book Sexual Fluidity.
In this book Diamond profiles some of the women she interviewed and also provides excellent descriptions of th...more
In this book Diamond profiles some of the women she interviewed and also provides excellent descriptions of th...more
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3 comments
I enjoyed the intro to this book, in which she lays out her theories concerning fluidity in sexual attraction—I was interested that anyone would make a case for a gender difference in these patterns. I didn't really want to read the rest of the book, the case by case research results. I'd recommend it, though.
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bookshelves:
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non-fiction,
read--08
Read in February, 2008
Academic text on the concept of sexual fluidity in women. Involved a long term (ten year) study of women of varying sexualities and examined how they felt their sexual preferences had changed (if at all). Fascinating reading, particularly as someone who has felt that her sexuality is not a fixed point.
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