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Published by the:
American Humanist Association

The Humanist

May/June 1995

Volume 55, Number 3

Humanist Cover


Prostitution, Pornography, and Censorship: Two Humanist Approaches

The Culture of Pornography

by Alice Leuchtag

Are pornography and prostitution merely "victimless crimes"? Or are they powerful institutions by which a patriarchal culture continues to subjugate women? For anti-pornography feminists, the answer is clear: outlawing pornography and prostitution are the two biggest challenges facing the women's movement.

The Perils of Pornophobia

by Nadine Strossen

Far from offering a radical new analysis of the problem, anti-pornography feminists are actually harming the cause of women's rights by promoting a deeply puritanical approach to sexual issues. Even worse, their driftnet proposals for censorship offer a potent tool to the right--one which has already been used against women's groups.

Cover Story:

Elvis' DNA: The Gene As a Cultural Icon

by Dorothy Nelkin and M. Susan Lindee

Over the last several decades, an insiduous idea has taken popular root: the notion that genetic predisposition can account for everything from intelligence and artistic abilities to political opinions and criminal behavior. A review of the relevant literature reveals how widespread--and wrong--this notion is.

A Humanist Look at Education

The Corporate Takeover of American Schools

by Deron Robert Boyles

An ominous trend in educational policy has been the appeal to corporate models of "accountability" and "performance" as the yardstick for educational effectiveness. Are these managerial strategies really designed to promote the critical thinking skills so important to citizens in a democracy? Or are they more concerned with ensuring ideological hegemony?

"Coherence Lost": Education, Modernity, and Fractured Meaning

by Pete A.Y. Gunter

Have we lost coherence and wholeness in educational theory? Has relentless specialization turned human knowledge into a mass of unbalanced and poorly related parts? Have we developed two rival and antithetical cultures--one scientific and analytic; the other artistic and creative? And if the answer to all of the above is "yes," what should we do about it? Alfred North Whitehead had some ideas.

Curriculum and Culture

by Paul Shore

The European approach to education reflects a different understanding than is found in America: knowledge is valued for itself, not as a means to future gain. Beyond that, it provides something sorely lacking in the United States: a coherent historical narrative and language through which citizens can gain entrance to their own culture.



Departments

Letters

Watch on the Right

by John Swomley

First Person

by Max Edelman

Civil Liberties Watch

by Barbara Dority

The Culture War

by Barth Keck

Worth Noting

by John B. Massen

Church and State

by Edd Doerr

Our Queer World

by Scott Tucker

Humanistic Economics

by John Buell

Humanist Poetry

"Vocation" and "An Ivy Leaguer Lashes Out"

by Linda Sejfulla

"A Problem to Be Politically Corrected"

by J.L. Kubicek

Cover:

Photocollage by Mimi Heft © 1995

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