Manufacturing heterosexuality: hormone replacement therapy and menopause in urban Oaxaca

Author:
RAMIREZ Michelle
Journal article citation:
Culture, Health and Sexuality, 8(6), November 2006, pp.545-558.
Publisher:
Taylor and Francis

For several decades, hormone replacement therapies have been prescribed to women, not only to prevent disease but to improve the sexual functioning of menopausal women. The medical promotion of continued sexual activity in a woman's post‐reproductive years is exported to locations outside of North America and Europe, which provides an opportunity to critically examine the cultural roots that have informed expert biomedical representations. This ethnographic study examined menopause and social class in Oaxaca de Juarez, Mexico using interviews, questionnaires, and textual analysis. The research found that biomedicine in conjunction with the pharmaceutical industry promoted culturally constructed gender hierarchies under the guise of optimal menopausal health. However, women's actual experience of gender and sexuality in mid‐life diverged significantly from these expert representations. Themes that emerged in interviews and questionnaires included the importance of motherhood in old age, diminished sexual desire as not problematic, and greater sexual freedom at a post‐reproductive age. Ultimately, biomedical discourse was not the sole arbiter of appropriate menopausal womanhood and femininity.

Subject terms:
medication, older people, sexuality, women, gender;
Content type:
research
Location(s):
Mexico
Link:
Journal home page
ISSN online:
1464-5351
ISSN print:
1369-1058

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