Article(electronic)March 1, 2004

The politics of scientific knowledge: Constructions of sexuality and ethics in the conversion therapy literature

In: Lesbian & Gay Psychology Review, Volume 5, Issue 1, p. 6-12

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Abstract

AbstractIn this paper I explore some of the discursive practices that shape scientific knowledge in the debates surrounding conversion therapy. In doing so I identify some of the key rhetorical strategies that promote these debates as being within the realm of science, namely a reliance on foundationalist assumptions about ethics and sexuality, and the use of the 'rhetoric of pseudoscience' (Kitzinger, 1990) to construct what constitutes 'good science'. Following this I point towards the individualism that informs scientific research, and what this means for lesbian and gay psychology more generally. I conclude by outlining possible directions for 'setting our own agendas' within the area, with particular focus on the importance of the political in critical research.

Languages

English

Publisher

British Psychological Society

ISSN: 2976-8772

DOI

10.53841/bpslg.2004.5.1.6

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