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ID155121
Title ProperSexual knowledge, sexual anxieties
Other Title InformationMiddle-class males in western India and the correspondence in Samaj Swasthya, 1927–53
LanguageENG
AuthorHaynes, Douglas E ;  SHRIKANT BOTRE ;  Botre, Shrikant
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines letters written by young men to the Marathi-language journal Samaj Swasthya and its editor, R. D. Karve, a major advocate of birth control and sex education in western India. The letters, and Karve's responses to them, constituted perhaps the earliest sex-advice column in Indian print media. We argue here that the correspondence provides a unique vehicle for understanding the forms of sexual knowledge held by middle-class males in mid-twentieth-century India as well as for appreciating their most significant sexual anxieties. The article analyses the concerns expressed in the letters about masturbation and seminal emissions, the nature of the female body and processes of conception, birth control and same-sex sexual practices. It particularly illuminates the ways in which the concept of modern conjugality pervaded the sexual understandings of the young men who wrote to Karve. It thus offers valuable insights into specifically sexual aspects of conjugality and masculinity—aspects that have previously been unexplored.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 51, No.4; Jul 2017: p.991-1034
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2017-08 51, 4
Key WordsWestern India ;  Middle-Class ;  Sexual Knowledge ;  Sexual Anxieties ;  Males ;  Samaj Swasthya ;  1927–53