The Sex Effect: Baring Our Complicated Relationship with Sex

Author:   Ross Benes ,  A.J. Jacobs
Publisher:   Sourcebooks, Inc
ISBN:  

9781492647423


Pages:   336
Publication Date:   04 April 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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The Sex Effect: Baring Our Complicated Relationship with Sex


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Overview

A revealing study on the impact of humans' most primal behavior and the unexpected ways society affects our sex lives A gripping exploration of the relationship between sex and our society, with a foreword by bestselling author A.J. Jacobs Why do political leaders become entangled in so many sex scandals? How did the U.S. military inadvertently help make San Francisco a mecca of gay culture? And what was the original purpose of vibrators? Find out the answers to all these questions and more as journalist Ross Benes delves into the complicated relationship between everyday human life-including religion, politics, and technology-and our sexuality. Drawing on history, psychology, sociology, and more, The Sex Effect combines innovative research and analysis with captivating anecdotes to reveal just how much sex shapes our society-and what it means for us as humans as we continue to struggle with the wide-ranging effects our sexuality has on the world around us.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ross Benes ,  A.J. Jacobs
Publisher:   Sourcebooks, Inc
Imprint:   Sourcebooks, Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.90cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.522kg
ISBN:  

9781492647423


ISBN 10:   149264742
Pages:   336
Publication Date:   04 April 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

In this fascinating work, buttressed with massive research from impeccable sources, Benes shows how sex and the perception of sex affect so many aspects of cultures from why we eat corn flakes to the economic influence of gay communities and more. - <strong><em> Richard Kimbrough, author of History Mysteries</em> </strong>


A thought-provoking read on a subject that would otherwise seem to have been overworked already. - <strong><em> Daniel Halperin, co-author of Tinderbox, former senior HIV prevention advisor at USAID, former faculty member of Harvard School of Public Health</em> </strong>


-A witty discussion of the indirect role sex plays across political, economic, religious, and cultural landscapes...a probing, multifacted commentary on the social science of sex and society...a book marinated in provocative assertions that are certain to instigate debate and productive discussion.- - Kirkus -This is is a no nonsense, honest, factual and clearly exposed dialogue about human sexuality. The social constructs and interesting historical developments that shape attitudes toward masturbation, homosexuality, religious influences and scandals all come under intelligent consideration. The text is infused with sociological and psychological wisdom without ever being dogmatic and certainly never boring.- - Richard Sipe, author of A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy and Sex, Priests, and Power: Anatomy of a Crisis -The topic of sex elicits intense moral and political sentiments, so it's especially important to approach it in a clear-headed way. This book does an excellent job with that - the only preaching you'll find here is in favor of a more rational understanding of sex. Far more wide-ranging than most books about sex, it surveys the diverse and counterintuitive ways in which sex impacts society. Engaging and honest, you'll be surprised by how much you learn.- - Michael Price, Brunel University psychology professor and Psychology Today contributor -In this fascinating work, buttressed with massive research from impeccable sources, Benes shows how sex and the perception of sex affect so many aspects of cultures from why we eat corn flakes to the economic influence of gay communities and more.- - Richard Kimbrough, author of History Mysteries -Benes has combined history, epidemiology, anthropology, neuroscience and whatever it takes to produce a well-written, engaging, clever, highly informative book. The Sex Effect is a welcome respite from the usual partisan bickering and moralizing that this subject usually evokes.- - Edward C. Green, former Director of the Harvard AIDS Prevention Project -Benes winnows out many surprising motivations behind familiar products, and also shows how, for everyone from cereal makers to pharmaceutical companies, sometimes the best-laid plans lead to marvelous tangential results. Conversational, approachable, and credible, Benes delivers story after story that will surprise you and challenge your assumptions: Once you have read this book, I doubt you will ever eat a weasel again.- - Patchen Barss, author of The Erotic Engine -Ross Benes' smart and enjoyable book takes us on a fascinating odyssey through the hidden ways that humanity's endless struggle with sex influences the entirely unsexual aspects of our daily lives. The secret history of Graham crackers, the rise of pelvic massages by sheepish doctors, the story of military-sanctioned brothels, all are narrated with wit and unexpected insight.- - Ogi Ogas, co-author of A Billion Wicked Thoughts: What the World's Largest Experiment Reveals About Human Desire -A thought-provoking read on a subject that would otherwise seem to have been overworked already.- - Daniel Halperin, co-author of Tinderbox, former senior HIV prevention advisor at USAID, former faculty member of Harvard School of Public Health -The Sex Effect is an entertaining and well-researched exploration of the unintended consequences of our sexual misapprehensions and mythologies. Benes reminds us at every turn how persistent and pervasive is the parallax between what's true about human sexuality, and what we insist on believing about it.- - Rachel Maines, author of The Technology of Orgasm A witty discussion of the indirect role sex plays across political, economic, religious, and cultural landscapes...a probing, multifacted commentary on the social science of sex and society...a book marinated in provocative assertions that are certain to instigate debate and productive discussion. - Kirkus This is is a no nonsense, honest, factual and clearly exposed dialogue about human sexuality. The social constructs and interesting historical developments that shape attitudes toward masturbation, homosexuality, religious influences and scandals all come under intelligent consideration. The text is infused with sociological and psychological wisdom without ever being dogmatic and certainly never boring. - Richard Sipe, author of A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy and Sex, Priests, and Power: Anatomy of a Crisis The topic of sex elicits intense moral and political sentiments, so it's especially important to approach it in a clear-headed way. This book does an excellent job with that - the only preaching you'll find here is in favor of a more rational understanding of sex. Far more wide-ranging than most books about sex, it surveys the diverse and counterintuitive ways in which sex impacts society. Engaging and honest, you'll be surprised by how much you learn. - Michael Price, Brunel University psychology professor and Psychology Today contributor Benes has combined history, epidemiology, anthropology, neuroscience and whatever it takes to produce a well-written, engaging, clever, highly informative book. The Sex Effect is a welcome respite from the usual partisan bickering and moralizing that this subject usually evokes. - Edward C. Green, former Director of the Harvard AIDS Prevention Project Benes winnows out many surprising motivations behind familiar products, and also shows how, for everyone from cereal makers to pharmaceutical companies, sometimes the best-laid plans lead to marvelous tangential results. Conversational, approachable, and credible, Benes delivers story after story that will surprise you and challenge your assumptions: Once you have read this book, I doubt you will ever eat a weasel again. - Patchen Barss, author of The Erotic Engine Ross Benes' smart and enjoyable book takes us on a fascinating odyssey through the hidden ways that humanity's endless struggle with sex influences the entirely unsexual aspects of our daily lives. The secret history of Graham crackers, the rise of pelvic massages by sheepish doctors, the story of military-sanctioned brothels, all are narrated with wit and unexpected insight. - Ogi Ogas, co-author of A Billion Wicked Thoughts: What the World's Largest Experiment Reveals About Human Desire A thought-provoking read on a subject that would otherwise seem to have been overworked already. - Daniel Halperin, co-author of Tinderbox, former senior HIV prevention advisor at USAID, former faculty member of Harvard School of Public Health In this fascinating work, buttressed with massive research from impeccable sources, Benes shows how sex and the perception of sex affect so many aspects of cultures from why we eat corn flakes to the economic influence of gay communities and more. - Richard Kimbrough, author of History Mysteries The Sex Effect is an entertaining and well-researched exploration of the unintended consequences of our sexual misapprehensions and mythologies. Benes reminds us at every turn how persistent and pervasive is the parallax between what's true about human sexuality, and what we insist on believing about it. - Rachel Maines, author of The Technology of Orgasm


This is is a no nonsense, honest, factual and clearly exposed dialogue about human sexuality. The social constructs and interesting historical developments that shape attitudes toward masturbation, homosexuality, religious influences and scandals all come under intelligent consideration. The text is infused with sociological and psychological wisdom without ever being dogmatic and certainly never boring. - <strong><em> Richard Sipe, author of A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy and Sex, Priests, and Power: Anatomy of a Crisis </em> </strong>


Author Information

ROSS BENES has worked for Esquire and Deadspin, where he wrote about sex, sports, statistics, and pop culture. He's a journalist and researcher whose work has also appeared in the Wall Street Journal, New York Magazine, Rolling Stone, and Slate. A native of Brainard, Nebraska, he splits time between his home state and New York.

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