3. Further works

Allan, Jonathan. (year?). Reading from Behind: A Cultural Analysis of the Anus. Zed Books.
Introduction: No Wrong Doors: An Entryway 1. Anal Theory, or Reading from Behind 2. Orienting Virginity 3. Topping from the Bottom: Anne Tenino’s Frat Boy and Toppy 4. Orienting Brokeback Mountain 5. Spanking Colonialism 6. Unlocking Delmira Agustini’s ‘El Intruso’ 7. Shameful Matrophilia in Dona Herlinda y su hijo 8. Vengeful Vidal

Annfelt, Trine. (2002). More gender equality - bigger breasts? Battles over gender and the body. Nora: Nordic Journal of Women’s Studies, Volume 10 Number 3, December.

Atkinson, Michael. (2002). Pretty in Ink: Conformity, Resistance and Negotiation in Women’s Tattooing. Sex Roles, 47: 5/6, pp. 219-33.

Aubrey, J. S. (2007). The Impact of Sexually Objectifying Media Exposure on Negative Body Emotions and Sexual Self-Perceptions: Investigating the Mediating Role of Body Self-Consciousness. Mass Communication and Society, 10(1): 1 - 23.

Bailey, M.E. (1993). Foucauldian feminism: Contesting bodies, sexuality and identity. In Caroline Ramazanoglu,. (ed.). Up Against Foucault: Explorations of Some Tensions Between Foucault and Feminism. London: Routledge.

Balsamo, Anne. (1996). Technologies of the Gendered Body: Reading Cyborg Women. Duke University Press.

Banes, Sally. (year?). Dancing Women: Female Bodies on Stage. Routledge.

Bartky, Sandra. (1988). Foucault, Femininity, and the Modernisation of Patriarchal Power. In Diamond, L, and Quinby, L. (eds.). Feminism and Foucault: Reflections on Resistance. Boston.

Bartlett, Alison, and Fiona Giles. (2004). Australian Feminist Studies, Theme: meanings of breastmilk: New feminist flavours. Volume 19, Number 45, November.

Bing, Janet. (1999). Brain Sex: How the media report and distort brain research. Women and Language, Fall, 22(2).

Birke, Lynda, and G. Vines. (1987). Beyond Nature Versus Nurture: Process and Biology in the Development of Gender. Women’s Studies International Forum, 10(6).

Birke, Lynda. (2000). Sitting on the Fence: Biology, Feminism and Gender-Bending Environments. Women’s Studies International Forum, 23(5)

Bleier, Ruth. (1984). Science and Gender: A Critique of Biology and its Theories on Women. New York: Pergamon Press.

Bordo, Susan. (1993). Feminism, Foucault and the politics of the body. In Caroline Ramazanoglu,. (ed.). Up Against Foucault: Explorations of Some Tensions Between Foucault and Feminism. London: Routledge.

Boston Women’s Health Book Collective. (1998). Our Bodies, Ourselves For The New Century. Newly revised and updated ed. New York: Simon & Schuster.

Boyd, H., & Murnen, S. K. (2017). Thin and sexy vs. muscular and dominant: Prevalence of gendered body ideals in popular dolls and action figures. Body image, 21, 90-96. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bodyim.2017.03.003

Braun, V. (2004). A sheath for a sword? Culture, shaping bodies, shaping sex. In N. Gavey, A. Potts, A. Wetherell (Eds.), Sex and the Body (pp. 17-34). Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

Braun, V. (2005). In search of (better) sexual pleasure: female genital ‘cosmetic’ surgery. Sexualities, 8(4), 407-424.

Braun, V. (2009). In Search of (Better) Sexual Pleasure: Female Genital ‘Cosmetic, Surgery’’, In Rebecca F. Plante & Lis M. Maurer (Eds.), Doing Gender Diversity: Readings in Theory and Real-World Experience. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. [reprinted article]

Braun, V. (2009). Selling the ‘perfect’ vulva: a critical analysis of surgeons’ promotional websites for ‘designer vagina’ surgery. In Hayes, C., & Jones, M. (Eds.) Cosmetic Surgery: A Feminist Primer. Farnham, UK: Ashgate.

Braun, V. & Ensler, E. (1999). Public talk about ‘private parts’: an ‘intimate’ conversation with Eve Ensler. Feminism & Psychology, 9, 515-522.

Braun, V. & Ensler, E. (2001). Public talk about ‘private parts’. In M. Crawford & R-. K. Unger (Eds.), In our own words: Writings from women’s lives (2nd ed., pp. 288-293). New York: McGraw-Hill.

Braun, V., & Kitzinger, C. (2001). ‘Snatch’, ‘hole’, or ‘honey pot’? Semantic categories and the problem of non-specificity in female genital slang. Journal of Sex Research, 38, 146-158.

Braun, V., & Kitzinger, C. (2001). Telling it straight? Dictionary definitions of women’s genitals. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 5, 214-232.

Braun, V., & Kitzinger, C. (2001). The perfectible vagina: Size matters. Culture Health & Sexuality, 3, 263-277.

Braun, V., & Wilkinson, S. (2001). Socio-cultural representations of the vagina. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology, 19, 17-32.

Braun, V., & Wilkinson, S. (2003). The vagina: Liability or asset? POWS Review, 5, 28-42.

Braun, V., & Wilkinson, S. (2004). Socio-cultural representations of the vagina. In M. Stombler, D. M. Baunach, E. O. Burgess, D. Donnelly and W. Simonds (Eds.), Sex matters: The sexuality and society reader (pp. 230-240). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.

Braun, V., & Wilkinson, S. (2005). Vagina equals woman? On genitals and gendered identity. Women’s Studies International Forum, 28(6), 509-522.

Braun, Virginia, and Sue Wilkinson (2005). Vagina equals woman? On genitals and gendered identity. Women’s Studies International Forum, Volume 28, Issue 6, November-December: 509-522.

Braziel, Jana, and Kathleen LeBesco. (eds.). (2001). Bodies Out of Bounds: Fatness and transgression. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

Butler, S. M., Smith, N. K., Collazo, E., Caltabiano, L., & Herbenick, D. (2015). Pubic hair preferences, reasons for removal, and associated genital symptoms: comparisons between men and women. The journal of sexual medicine, 12(1), 48-58.

Cahill, Ann J. (2000). Foucault, Rape, and the Construction of the Feminine Body. Hypatia, 15(1), Winter

Canning, Kathleen. (1999). The Body as Method? Reflections on the place of the body in gender history. Gender & History, 11(3), November.

Caplan and Caplan. (year?). Sex Differences in Aggression. Chapter Six in Thinking Critically,

Chambers, S. A. (2007). ‘Sex’ and the Problem of the Body: Reconstructing Judith Butler’s Theory of Sex/Gender. Body & Society, 13(4): 47-75.

Charlotte, N. M., M. M. Patrick, and L. B. Leann. (2004). Understanding Women’s Body Satisfaction: The Role of Husbands. Sex Roles, 51(3-4): 209.

Choi, Precilla. (2000). Femininity and the Physically Active Woman. Routledge.

Coleman, R. (2008). The Becoming of Bodies -- Girls, media effects, and body image. Feminist Media Studies, 8(2): 163 - 179.

Conaglen, H. M. and J. V. Conaglen (2008). The impact of erectile dysfunction on female partners: a qualitative investigation. Sexual and Relationship Therapy, 23(2): 147 - 156.

Cooper, Ann. (year?). Choreographing Difference: The Body and Identity in Contemporary Dance. Albright Wesleyan University Press.

Counihan, Carole. (1999). The Anthropology of Food and Body: Gender, Meaning and Power. Routledge.

Davis, Kathy. (1995). Reshaping the Female Body: The Dilemma of Cosmetic Surgery. New York: Routledge.

Derenne, J.L., and E.V. Beresin. (2006). Body Image, Media, and Eating Disorders. Academic Psychiatry, Issue 30, pp. 257-261.

Doyle, J. (2008). The Spectre of the Scalpel: The Historical Role of Surgery and Anatomy in Conceptions of Embodiment. Body & Society, 14(1): 9-30.

Doyle, J. and K. Roen (2008). Surgery and Embodiment: Carving Out Subjects. Body & Society, 14(1): 1-7.

Dozier, Raine. (2005). Beards, Breasts, and Bodies: Doing Sex in a Gendered World. Gender & Society, Vol. 19, No. 3, June.

Dupr, John. (2001). Evolution and Gender. Women: a Cultural Review, Volume 12, Number 1, March.

Dutton, Kenneth. (1995). The Perfectible Body: The Western Ideal of Physical Development. London: Cassell.

Eagly, A. H. (2018). The Shaping of Science by Ideology: How Feminism Inspired, Led, and Constrained Scientific Understanding of Sex and Gender. Journal of Social Issues, 74(4), 871-888. doi:10.1111/josi.12291Eaton, A. A., & Rose, S. M. (2013). The application of biological, evolutionary, and sociocultural frameworks to issues of gender in introductory psychology textbooks. Sex roles, 69(9-10), 536-542.

Erika, S.-E. (2004). Little Girls in Women’s Bodies: Social Interaction and the Strategizing of Early Breast Development. Sex Roles, 51(1/2): 29.

Fausto-Sterling, Anne, Patricia Adair Gowaty, and Marlene Zuk. (1997). Evolutionary Psychology and Darwinian Feminism (Review essay), Feminist Studies, 23(2), Summer.

Fensham, Rachel. (2005). Beyond Corporeal Feminism: Thinking Performance at the End of the Twentieth Century. Women: a Cultural Review, 16(3), Winter.

Fingerson, Laura. (2006). Girls in Power: Gender, Body, and Menstruation in Adolescence. New York: State University of New York Press.

Francis, Richard C. (2004). Why Men Won’t Ask for Directions: The Seductions of Sociobiology. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.

Franckenstein, Frauke. (1997). Making up Cher: A Media Analysis of the Politics of the Female Body. European Journal of Women’s Studies, Volume 4 Issue 1, February.

Fraser, S. (2008). Hooked on the abstract: Cosmetic surgery, sociology and feminist theory [Review essay]. Australian Feminist Studies, 23(55): 159-162.

Frost, Liz. (2003). Doing Bodies Differently? Gender, Youth, Appearance and Damage. Journal of Youth Studies, 6(1), March, pp. 53-70.

Frueh, Joanna, Judith Stein, and Laurie Fierstein. (eds.). (2000). Picturing the Modern Amazon. Rizzoli.

Gilbert, S, Keery, H, & Thompson, JK, 2005. ‘The media’s role in body image and eating disorders’, in E Cole and J H Daniel (eds) Featuring Females: Feminist Analyses of the Media, American Psychological Association, Washington DC, pp. 41 – 56.

Gimlin, D. (2007). Accounting for Cosmetic Surgery in the USA and Great Britain: A Cross-cultural Analysis of Women’s Narratives. Body & Society, 13(1): 41-60.

Glenn, E. N. (2008). Yearning for Lightness: Transnational Circuits in the Marketing and Consumption of Skin Lighteners. Gender & Society, 22(3): 281-302.

Gowaty, Patricia Adair. (ed). (1997). Feminism and Evolutionary Biology. New York: Chapman & Hall

Green, F. J. (2005). From clitoridectomies to ‘designer vaginas’: The medical construction of heteronormative female bodies and sexuality through female genital cutting. Sexualities, Evolution & Gender, 7(2): 153-187.

Hammers, M. L. (2006). Talking About “Down There”: The Politics of Publicizing the Female Body through The Vagina Monologues. Women’s Studies in Communication, 29(2): 220.

Hamming, J. E. (2001). Dildonics, Dykes and the Detachable Masculine. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 8(3): 329-341.

Heywood, Leslie. (1996). Dedication to Hunger: The Anorexic Aesthetic in Modern Culture. Univ California Press.

Heywood, Leslie. (1997). Bodymakers: A Cultural Anatomy of Women’s Body Building. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.

Ho, Petula Sik Ying, and Adolf Ka Tat Tsang (2005). Beyond the vagina-clitoris debate: From naming the genitals to reclaiming the woman’s body. Women’s Studies International Forum, Volume 28, Issue 6, November-December: 523-534.

Howarth, C., Hayes, J., Simonis, M., & Temple-Smith, M. (2016). ‘Everything’s Neatly Tucked Away’: Young Women’s Views on Desirable Vulval Anatomy. Culture, Health & Sexuality, 18(12), 1363-1378. 10.1080/13691058.2016.1184315

Hypatia. (2005). Spring, Vol. 20, Iss. 2;
Anthropological, Social, and Moral Limitations of a Multiplicity of Genders / Hilge Landweer.
Asymmetrical Genders: Phenomenological Reflections on Sexual Difference / Silvia Stoller.
Body and Gender within the Stratifications of the Social Imaginary / Alice Pechriggl.
Anarchic Bodies: Foucault and the Feminist Question of Experience / Johanna Oksala.

Janicke, T., Häderer, I. K., Lajeunesse, M. J., & Anthes, N. (2016). Darwinian Sex Roles Confirmed across the Animal Kingdom. Science Advances, 2(2).

Johnston, Jessica R. (ed). (2001). The American Body in Context: An anthology. Wilmington, Del.: Scholarly Resources.
Includes;
Firm but Shapely, Fit but Sexy, Strong but Thin: The Postmodern Aerobicizing Female Bodies / Pirkko Markula (pp. 273-310).

Kember, Sarah. (2001). Resisting the New Evolutionism. Women: a Cultural Review, Volume 12, Number 1, March.

King, Debra Walker. (ed.). (2000). Body Politics and the Fictional Double. Indiana University Press.

Kissling, Elizabeth Arveda. (2006). Capitalising on the Curse: The Business of Menstruation. London, Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers.

Klysing, A. (2020). Exposure to Scientific Explanations for Gender Differences Influences Individuals’ Personal Theories of Gender and Their Evaluations of a Discriminatory Situation. Sex Roles, 82(5), 253-265. doi:10.1007/s11199-019-01060-wLancaster, Roger N. (2003). The Trouble with Nature: Sex in Science and Popular Culture. University of California Press.
Introduction. Culture Wars, Nature Wars: A Report from the Front.
ORIGINS STORIES.
1. In the Beginning, Nature.
2. The Normal Body.
3. The Human Design.
4. Our Animals, Our Selves.
ADAM AND EVE DO THE WILD THING: THE SCIENCE OF DESIRE, THE SELFISH GENE, AND OTHER MODERN FABLES.
5. The Science Question: Cultural Preoccupations and Social Struggles.
6. Sexual Selection: Eager, Aggressive Boy Meets Coy, Choosy Girl.
7. The Selfish Gene.
8. Genomania and Heterosexual Fetishism.
VENUS AND MARS AT THE FIN DE DIECLE: EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY AND THE MODERN ART OF SPIN.
9. Biological Beauty and the Straight Arrow of Desire.
10. Homo Faber, Family Man.
11. T-Power.
12. Nature’s Marriage Laws.
VARIETIES OF HUMAN NATURE: THE VIEW FROM ANTHROPOLOGY AND HISTORY.
13. Marooned on Survivor Island.
14. Selective Affinities: Commonalities and Differences in the Family of.
Man.
15. The Social Body.
16. The Practices of Sex.
PERMUTATIONS ON THE “NATURE” OF DESIRE: THE GAY BRAIN, THE GAY GENE, AND OTHER TALES OF IDENTITY.
17. This Queer Body.
18. The Biology of the Homosexual.
19. Desire Is Not a “Thing”.
20. Familiar Patterns, Dangerous Liaisons.
THE ENDS OF NATURE: THE WEIRD ANTINOMIES OF POSTMODERN MASS CULTURE.
21. “Nature” in Quotation Marks.
22. Money’s Subject.
23. History and Historicity Flow through the Body Politic.
24. The Politics of Dread and Desire.
25. Sex and Citizenship in the Age of Flexible Accumulation.
An Open-Ended Conclusion

Lowe, Maria. (1998). Women of Steel: Female body builders and the struggle for self-definition. NYU Press.

Martin, Emily. (1991). The Egg and the Sperm: How Science Has Constructed a Romance Based on Stereotypical Male-Female Roles. Signs, 16(3).

McCaughey, Martha. (2007). The Caveman Mystique: Pop-Darwinism and the Debates Over Sex, Violence, and Science. Routledge.

McClintock, Martha K. (1998). Whither Menstrual Synchrony? Annual Review of Sex Research, Volume IX.

McElvaine, Robert S. (2001). Eve’s Seed: Biology, the Sexes, and the Course of History. New York: McGraw-Hill.

McWhorter, Ladelle. (1999). Bodies and Pleasures: Foucault and the Politics of Sexual Normalization. Indiana University Press.

Millsted, Rachel, and Hannah Frith. (2003). Being Large-Breasted: Women negotiating embodiment. Women’s Studies International Forum, 26(5), pp. 455-465.

Moir, Anne, and Bill Moir. (1998). Why Men Don’t Iron: The Real Science of Gender Studies. London: Harper Collins.

Moore, Susan, and Doreen Rosenthal. (1993). Biological Aspects of Sexual Development. Chapter 3 in Sexuality in Adolescence. London: Routledge

Moran, C., & Lee, C. (2016). ‘Everyone wants a vagina that looks less like a vagina’: Australian women’s views on dissatisfaction with genital appearance. Journal of Health Psychology, 23(2), 229-239. doi:10.1177/1359105316637588

Nast, Heidi, and Steve Pile. (eds.). (1998). Places Through the Body. Routledge.

Nichter, Mimi. (2000). Fat Talk: What Dieting Means to Girls and Their Parents. Harvard University Press

O’Neill, R. (2015) Feminist Encounters with Evolutionary Psychology: Introduction. Australian Feminist Studies, 30(86): 345–50.

Oudshoorn, Nelly. (1994). Beyond the Natural Body: An Archaeology of Sex Hormones. New York & London: Routledge.

Patterson, Wanda M. et al. (2001). Body Dysmorphic Disorder. International Journal of Dermatology. 40, pp. 688-690.

Patton, T. O. (2006). Hey girl am I more than my hair?: African American women and their struggles with beauty, body image and hair. National Womens Studies Association Journal, 18(2), 24-51.

Peterson, Valerie. (2000). Mars and Venus: The rhetoric of sexual planetary alignment. Women and Language, Fall, 23(2).

Rhode, Deborah L. (1997). The Ideology and Biology of Gender Difference. Chapter 2 in Speaking of Sex: The Denial of Sex Equality. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press

Sanders, Clinton. (1989) Customizing the Body: The Art and Culture of Tattooing. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.

Sayers, Janet. (1982). Biological Politics: Feminist and Anti-Feminist Perspectives. London & New York: Tavistock.

Seymour, Wendy. (1998). Remaking the Body: Rehabilitation and Change. Routledge.

Shail, A. (2007). ‘Although a Woman’s Article’: Menstruant Economics and Creative Waste. Body & Society, 13(4): 77-96.

Sik Ying Ho, P., and A. Ka Tat Tsang. (2005). Beyond the vagina-clitoris debate--From naming the genitals to reclaiming the woman’s body. Women’s Studies International Forum, 28(6): 523-534.

Skewes, L., Fine, C., & Haslam, N. (2018). Beyond Mars and Venus: The role of gender essentialism in support for gender inequality and backlash. PLOS One, 13(7), e0200921.

Sloane, Ethel. (2002). Biology Of Women. 4th ed. Albany, NY: Delmar Thomson Learning.

Strelan, P., and D. Hargreaves. (2005). Women Who Objectify Other Women: The Vicious Circle of Objectification? Sex Roles. 52: 707-712.

Sullivan, Nikki. (2001). Tattooed Bodies: Subjectivity, Textuality, Ethics and Pleasure. Westport, CT.: Preager.

Synott, Anthony. (1993). The Body Social. Routledge.

Tebbel, Cyndi. (2000). The Body Snatchers: How the Media Shapes Women. Sydney: Finch

Thompson, J. K, Heinberg, J. H, 1999. ‘The Media’s Influence on Body Image Disturbance and Eating Disorders: We’ve Reviled Them, Now Can We Rehabititate Them?’, Journal of Social Issues, Vol. 55, No. 2, pp. 339 – 353.

Tischner, I. and H. Malson (2008). Exploring the Politics of Women’s In/Visible ‘Large’ Bodies. Feminism & Psychology, 18(2): 260-267.

Toerien, M., S. Wilkinson, and P. Y. L. Choi. (2005). Body Hair Removal: The ‘Mundane’ Production of Normative Femininity. Sex Roles, 52(5-6): 399.

Toerien, Merran, and Sue Wilkinson. (2003). Gender and Body Hair: Constructing the feminine woman. Women’s Studies International Forum, 26(4), pp. 333-344.

Tolman, Deborah L. (ed.) (2006). Sexuality Research and Social Policy, Dec., Vol. 3, No. 4, Special Issue: Through a Lens of Embodiment: New Research From the Center for Research on Gender and Sexuality.
Introduction to Special Issue: Through a Lens of Embodiment: New Research From the Center for Research on Gender and Sexuality / Deborah L. Tolman (1-7).
Dis/Embodied Voices: What Late-Adolescent Girls Can Teach Us About Objectification and Sexuality / Celeste Hirschman, Emily A. Impett, Deborah Schooler (8-20).
On Bodies and Research: Transgender Issues in Health and HIV Research Articles / Rita M. Melendez, Lathem A. Bonem, Robert Sember (21-38).
Minding the Body: Yoga, Embodiment, and Well-Being / Emily A. Impett, Jennifer J. Daubenmier, Allegra L. Hirschman (39-48).
Setting Rules or Sitting Down: Parental Mediation of Television Consumption and Adolescent Self-Esteem, Body Image, and Sexuality / Deborah Schooler, Janna L. Kim, Lynn Sorsoli (49-62).

Tone, Andrea. (2001). Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America. New York: Hill and Wang.

Turner, Bryan S. (1992). Regulating Bodies: Essays in Medical Sociology. Routledge.

Unger, Rhoda. (ed.). (2007) Feminism & Psychology, Special feature: ‘Toward a Redefinition of Sex and Gender, November, Vol. 17, No. 4.
Editor’s Introduction: Uniting Scientific Rigour and Social Justice Concerns: A Feminist Classic / Sue Wilkinson (429-433).
It Made Us Think Differently: Unger’s ‘Toward a Redefinition of Sex and Gender’ / Carmen Poulin (435-441).
The Subtleties of Meaning: Still Arguing After All These Years / Joan C. Chrisler (442-446).
On the Necessity of Distinguishing Between Sex and Gender / Marie-France Pichevin and Marie-Claude Hurtig (447-452).
Adding Gender to the Mix: A Commentary on ‘Toward a Redefinition of Sex and Gender’ / Meredith M. Kimball (453-458).
Feminist Questions, Feminist Answers: Towards a Redefinition / Alexandra Rutherford (459-464).
Redefinition Reviewed: What ‘Toward a Redefinition of Sex and Gender’ Can Offer Today / Rose Capdevila (465-469).
Meanings of Sex and Gender for a New Generation of Feminist Psychologists / Alyssa N. Zucker and Joan M. Ostrove (470-474).
Reconsidering ‘Sex’ and ‘Gender’: two Steps Forward, One Step Back / Eileen L. Zurbriggen and Aurora M. Sherman (475-480).
From Sex to gender and Back Again: Co-optation of a Feminist Language Reform / Mary Crawford and Annie Fox (481-486).
Afterword: From Inside and Out: Reflecting on a Feminist Politics of Gender in Psychology / Rhoda K. Unger (487-494).

Van Lenning, A. (2004). The Body As Crowbar: Transcending Or Stretching Sex?. Feminist Theory, April, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 25-47.

Wanless, Mary Dorsey. (2001). Barbie’s Body Images. Feminist Media Studies, Volume 1, Number 1, March, pp. 125-127.

Ward, L., A. Merriwether and A. Caruthers (2006). Breasts Are for Men: Media, Masculinity Ideologies, and Men’s Beliefs About Women’s Bodies. Sex Roles, 55(9): 703-714.

Wardman, N. P. (2017). ‘So You Can’t Blame Us Then?’: Gendered Discourses of Masculine Irresponsibility as Biologically Determined and Peer-Pressured in Upper-Primary School Contexts. Gender and Education, 29(6), 796-812. 10.1080/09540253.2016.1166178Weitz, Rose. (2001). Women and their hair: Seeking power through resistance and accommodation. Gender & Society, October, 15(5).

Wickman, Jan. (2003). Masculinity and female bodies. Nora: Nordic Journal of Women’s Studies, 11(1), pp. 40-54.

Wijngaard, Marianne van Den. (1997). Reinventing the Sexes: The Biomedical Construction of Femininity and Masculinity..

Women’s Studies, Volume 34 Number 3-4/April-June 2005;
Introduction. Body Works: Transgressions and Transformations / Sam Murray and Cathy Hawkins.
Feminism, Technology and Body Projects / Victoria Pitts.
Body/Mine: A Chaos Narrative of Cyborg Subjectivities and Liminal Experiences / Annette Gough.
Doing Politics or Selling Out? Living the Fat Body / Samantha Murray.
‘How does she do that?’ Belly Dancing and the Horror of a Flexible Woman / Virginia Keft-Kennedy.
The Well-Tempered Breast: Fostering Fluidity in Breastly Meaning and Function / Fiona Giles.
Unreformed Bodies: Normative Anxiety and the Denial of Pleasure / Margrit Shildrick.

Wyer, Mary, and Laura Severin. (eds.). (2000). NWSA Journal. Special Issue: The Science and Politics of the Search for Sex Differences. 12(3), Fall. Includes;
Laura Severin and Mary Wyer / The Science and Politics of the Search for Sex Differences: Editorial.
Celia Roberts / Biological Behavior? Hormones, Psychology, and Sex.
Karen Messing, Katherine Lippel, Diane Demers, And Donna Mergler / Equality and Difference in the Workplace: Physical Job Demands, Occupational Illnesses, and Sex Differences.
Rebecca M. Herzig / The Woman Beneath the Hair: Treating Hypertrichosis, 1870-1930 / 50.
Heather Lee Miller / Sexologists Examine Lesbians and Prostitutes in the United States, 1840-1940.
Laura Briggs And Jodi I. Kelber-Kaye / “There Is No Unauthorized Breeding in Jurassic Park”: Gender and the Uses of Genetics.
Bernice L. Hausman / Do Boys Have to Be Boys? Gender, Narrativity, and the John/Joan Case.
Marta L. Wayne / Walking a Tightrope: The Feminist Life of a Drosophilia Biologist.
Cynthia Kraus / Naked Sex in Exile: On the Paradox of the “Sex Question” in Feminism and

Zinn, Maxine Baca, Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, and Michael A. Messner. (eds.). (2005). Through the Prism of Difference: Readings on Sex and Gender. 3rd edition. Oxford University Press.
II. BODIES, CONTROL AND RESISTANCE.
7. Jane Sprague Zones / Beauty Myths and Realities and Their Impact on Women’s Health.
8. Nomy Lamm / It’s a Big Fat Revolution.
9. Tamara Beauboeuf-Lafontant / Strong and Large Black Women? Exploring Relationships Between Deviant Womanhood and Weight.
10. Jen’nan Ghazal Read and John P. Bartkowski / To Veil or Not to Veil? A Case Study of Identity Negotiation Among Muslim Women in Austin, Texas.
11. Don Sabo / Doing Time, Doing Masculinity: Sports in Prison.
12. Betsy Lucal / What it Means to be Gendered Me: Life on the Boundaries of a Dichotomous Gender System.