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Civil Rights - General, Civil Rights - Privacy, Interpersonal Relations - Psychology, Social Sciences - General & Miscellaneous, Relationships - Interpersonal
Private Affairs by Philip Brian Harper β€” book cover

Private Affairs

by Philip Brian Harper
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Overview

In Private Affairs, Phillip Brian Harper explores the social and cultural significance of the private, proposing that, far from a universal right, privacy is limited by one's racial-and sexual-minority status. Ranging across cinema, literature, sculpture, and lived encounters-from Rodin's The Kiss to Jenny Livingston's Paris is Burning-Private Affairs demonstrates how the very concept of privacy creates personal and sociopolitical hierarchies in contemporary America.

About the Author, Philip Brian Harper

Author of Are We Not Men? Masculine Anxiety and the Problem of African-American Identity and Framing the Margins: The Social Logic of Postmodern Culture, Phillip Brian Harper is Professor of American Studies and English at New York University.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"What Phillip Brian Harper makes of his personal encounters-whether with a hustler, a homeless man, a panicky straight guy at the gym, or with the racism of Andrew Sullivan's forecast of the end of AIDS-is of utmost public significance. His Private Affairs teaches us how thoroughly complex is the negotiation of privacy and publicity when we attend to gender and sexuality, race and class."

-Douglas Crimp,

"Full of valuable new insights, Private Affairs is a necessary addition to contemporary debates about citizenship and identity. Harper challenges our tendency to see racial identity as public and sexuality as private. Instead he argues that in both cases the public demands of civic duty collide with private knowledges, and that each is necessary to realize the other."

-Cindy Patton,author of Inventing AIDS

Book Details

Published
June 30, 1999
Publisher
New York : New York University Press, c1999.
Pages
200
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780814735930

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