Life

Check out the lecture and discussion by Dr. Jennifer Tyburczy on her book that discusses the role museums play in using display as a tactic for disciplining sexuality.

By Kyle Crocco, Writing Peer
Monday, May 2nd, 2016 - 11:12am


  Check out the lecture and discussion by Dr. Jennifer Tyburczy on her book that discusses the role museums play in using display as a tactic for disciplining sexuality.

Out Talks: Sex Museums with Prof. Jennifer Tyburczy

Monday, May 9, 6-8 p.m.
SRB, Multipurpose Room

Dinner will be provided, and they will also be giving away a limited number of copies of the book!
RSVP at http://goo.gl/forms/86MrFkcoS8

All museums are sex museums. In Sex Museums, Jennifer Tyburczy takes a hard look at the formation of Western sexuality - particularly how categories of sexual normalcy and perversity are formed - and asks what role museums have played in using display as a technique for disciplining sexuality.

Most museum exhibits, she argues, assume that white, patriarchal heterosexuality and traditional structures of intimacy, gender, and race represent national sexual culture for their visitors. Sex Museums illuminates the history of such heteronormativity at most museums and proposes alternative approaches for the future of public display projects, while also offering the reader curatorial tactics - what she calls queer curatorship - for exhibiting diverse sexualities in the twenty-first century.

Tyburczy shows museums to be sites of culture-war theatrics, where dramatic civic struggles over how sex relates to public space, genealogies of taste and beauty, and performances of sexual identity are staged. Delving into the history of erotic artifacts, she analyzes how museums have historically approached the collection and display of the material culture of sex, which poses complex moral, political, and logistical dilemmas for the Western museum.

Sex Museums unpacks the history of the museum and its intersections with the history of sexuality to argue that the Western museum context - from its inception to the present - marks a pivotal site in the construction of modern sexual subjectivity.