Richard G. Parker
Personal Information
Description
American anthropologist, sociologist, sexologist and Brazilianist. Richard Guy Parker is a professor of sociomedical sciences and of anthropology, arts and sciences, at the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, where he received an award for teaching excellence in 2004. He serves as director of the university's Center for the Study of Culture, Politics, and Health.
Books
Bodies, pleasures, and passions
Originally published in the early 1990s, Bodies, Pleasures, and Passions quickly became a classic ethnographic study of the social, cultural and historical construction of sexuality and sexual diversity. Drawing on extensive field research and interviews, together with the analysis of historical and literary texts, anthropologist Richard Parker mapped out the multiple cultural systems that structure gender, sexuality, and erotic practices in Brazil, and helped to open up a new wave of social science research on sexuality. Using ethnographic methods focusing on sexual meanings as an alternative to traditional surveys of sexual behavior, Parker argues that sexual life can only be fully understood through an analysis of the cultural logics that shape experience. Drawing on the tradition of interpretive anthropology, he focuses on the diverse sexual scripts that have been articulated in Brazilian culture and examines the often contradictory ways in which these scripts shape the sexual experience of different individuals. He highlights the sexual socialization of children and young people, and the changing sexual realities of adults living in a rapidly changing world. He underlines the ways in which complex cultural forms such as carnaval can be understood as stories that Brazilians tell themselves about themselves and about the meaning of sexuality in contemporary Brazilian life.
A AIDS no Brasil, 1982-1992
"Second volume in the series Historia social da AIDS, this multidisciplinary collection of essays draws upon seminar series held by the Instituto de Medicina Social of the Univ. do Estado do Rio de Janeiro. Papers examine epidemiology of AIDS, its social impact, and its impact on politics and civil society. Concludes with a proposal to develop an AIDS program"--Handbook of Latin American Studies, v. 57.
