Sex, Gender, and Sexuality in Colonial Modernity: Towards a Sociology of Webbed Connectivities

dc.contributor.authorPatil, Vrushali
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-28T16:09:59Z
dc.date.issued2017-09-29
dc.description.abstractIn recent years, scholarship on the relationship between sex, sexuality, and race in a transnational context has grown considerably. Within this broader arena, scholars across a number of (inter)disciplines including history, philosophy, gender studies, and sexuality studies have argued that Euro-American colonial relations were key in circulating, privileging, and solidifying racialized, heteronormative sex, and gender binaries across colonies and metropoles (see for example Lugones Reference Lugones2007; Woollacott Reference Woollacott2006). This chapter has two main aims. First, I make an assessment of, and contribution to, the development of this historical-transnational lens. I do so by developing a relationally oriented, “connected histories” historical sociological account (see Bhambra Reference Bhambra2010; also, Introduction of this volume) of the transnational connections this approach emphasizes. I center a number of overlapping and interconnected agents, including global capital, post/colonial states, material culture, the western sciences, and the Catholic Church, highlighting the relationships they collectively establish among multiple, often divergent, and seemingly discrete sex, gender, and sexuality regimes. I term this a webbed connectivities approach to sex, gender, and sexuality, and I argue that such an approach takes seriously the ways in which coloniality, or the complex, multiple, and multidirectional cross-border colonial processes, circuits, and formations, have shaped and continue to shape racialized notions of sex, gender, and sexuality in different locales today.
dc.description.urihttps://www.cambridge.org/core/books/global-historical-sociology/sex-gender-and-sexuality-in-colonial-modernity-towards-a-sociology-of-webbed-connectivities/56A0719A8F554B4AA19FFB91096BB2B5
dc.format.extent18 pages
dc.genrebook chapters
dc.genrepreprints
dc.identifierdoi:10.13016/m2nxbi-pzbc
dc.identifier.citationPatil, Vrushali. “Sex, Gender, and Sexuality in Colonial Modernity: Towards a Sociology of Webbed Connectivities.” In Global Historical Sociology, edited by George Lawson and Julian Go. Cambridge University Press, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316711248.007.
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1017/9781316711248.007
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11603/39867
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherCambridge University Press
dc.relation.isAvailableAtThe University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC)
dc.relation.ispartofUMBC Gender & Women's Studies
dc.rightsThis item is likely protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. Unless on a Creative Commons license, for uses protected by Copyright Law, contact the copyright holder or the author.
dc.titleSex, Gender, and Sexuality in Colonial Modernity: Towards a Sociology of Webbed Connectivities
dc.typeText

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
SexGenderandSexualityinColonialModernity.pdf
Size:
255.28 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format