Wesleyan University Press, 462 pp., $35.00
The New York Times a few months ago (June 13), in an editorial about sex crimes by children, remarked that 'sick' sex demands a 'healthy' response—these adjectives startling with their judgmental, old-fashioned ring. We live in a moral climate where 'sickness' has long been associated with sexual repression, and at a moment of considerable social latitude about sexual arrangements, with some communities considering legalizing homosexual marriage, the ACLU filing a brief in defense of polygamy, Oprah Winfrey hosting rapists on TV ('could you just tell us something about your m.o.?').
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