In this lively book, Janice M. Irvine offers not only the first comprehensive history of the culture wars over
sex education but also an important examination of the politics of sexual speech in the United States. Exploring
the clash between professional sex education advocates on the one hand and the politicized Christian Right on the
other, Irvine vividly demonstrates the crucial role that sexual speech plays in cultural politics. Examining a
range of issues played out in living rooms and schools since the 1960s, she shows how a newly emerging Christian
Right chose sex education as one of its first battlegrounds, then went on to dominate the public conversation on
the subject. Talk about Sex is a rich and fascinating consideration of American sex education's strategic place
in the long history of efforts to regulate sexual morality by controlling sexual speech.
Irvine's original argument shows how sex education served as a bridge issue between the Old Right and the New Right.
Exploring the political uses of emotion as it relates to sexuality, Irvine demonstrates how this movement draws
on the tenacious power of sexual shame and fear in order to galvanize opposition to sex education. This book skillfully
demonstrates how--by framing sex education as radical, dangerous, and immoral--the Right has fostered a climate
in which it is risky, as former Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders found, to speak out in support of sexuality education.