STS Circle at Harvard
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Steven Epstein
Northwestern, Sociology

on
Sexual Health as Buzzword: Competing Stakes and Proliferating Agendas
Monday, September 17
12:15-2:00 p.m.
Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street, Room 100F

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Thursday, September 13.

Abstract: Sexual health is one of the great buzzwords of the early twenty-first 
century. The recent, exponential growth of discourses, practices, techniques, 
and industries that reference or profess the goal of sexual health marks a new 
moment in the history of engagement by health institutions with the domain of 
sexuality. At the same time, the convergence around the specific term masks a 
remarkable diversity of scientific, political, economic, and practical agendas 
which sometimes coexist and at other times directly compete. I seek to 
understand the contexts in which the term has arisen, the consequences of 
attempts to lay claim to it, the kinds of bodies and embodied subjectivity that 
are linked to its uses, and its implications for what we imagine sexuality to 
be.

Biography: Steven Epstein is Professor of Sociology and John C. Shaffer 
Professor in the Humanities at Northwestern University, where he has also 
directed the Science in Human Culture Program, and where he is a co-convener of 
the Sexualities Project at Northwestern. Epstein studies the “politics of 
knowledge”—more specifically, the contested production of expert and especially 
biomedical knowledge, with an emphasis on the interplay of social movements, 
experts, and health institutions, and with a focus on the politics of 
sexuality, gender, and race. His books include Impure Science: AIDS, Activism, 
and the Politics of Knowledge (1996), Inclusion: The Politics of Difference in 
Medical Research (2007), and the coedited volume Three Shots at Prevention: The 
HPV Vaccine and the Politics of Medicine’s Simple Solutions (2010). He has also 
published in such journals as Social Studies of Science, Sociological Theory, 
Body and Society, and Sexualities. He is spending the 2012-13 academic year at 
Harvard with support from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation.

A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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