Although it is easy to feel overwhelmed by the seemingly endless tirade of moral and political outrage, corporate greed, sex scandals, gun violence, and more, these societal crises have not simply spontaneously arisen in response to a mere few contemporary problems. Rather, today’s moral panics represent an aggregate of borrowed histories layered on for centuries upon centuries. While these current moral panics may seem like a very contemporary problem, they draw from a long history of collective panicking. Often these anxieties are disguised as myth or folklore, retold as stories that catapult these anxieties across cultures, languages, and popular media. Indeed, the so-called “normal," defined by those in power, has marginalized anything deemed threatening to societal values and interests (for example, homosexuality, women’s sexuality) and has transmitted those anxieties onto the available “deviant” bodies.
CITATION STYLE
Gohr, M. A. (2013). Do i have something in my teeth? Vagina dentata and its manifestations within popular culture. In The Moral Panics of Sexuality (pp. 27–43). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137353177_2
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.