Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Sexuality Now: Embracing Diversity

Rate this book
Sex is undoubtedly on your mind. So don't you want a human sexuality text that reflects your life situation and answers your questions? Loaded with information that students like you want and need to learn, this text hits the mark as it addresses concerns that students have about themselves with scientific fact, sensitivity, and humor. Going beyond simply providing a foundation in sexuality's biology and psychology, SEXUALITY EMBRACING DIVERSITY connects with you by exploring contemporary issues, changing sexual practices and behaviors, and their impact on your life. Complemented by informative visuals, the book covers the fluidity of gender and sexual orientation and takes into account the diverse contexts of today's students. The result is an eye-opening discussion about sexuality that enables you to understand more about yourself -- and what's going on around you.

Kindle Edition

First published February 1, 2004

17 people are currently reading
93 people want to read

About the author

Janell L. Carroll

26 books2 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
57 (33%)
4 stars
59 (34%)
3 stars
34 (20%)
2 stars
11 (6%)
1 star
9 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Ellery Rushing.
42 reviews
April 30, 2024
read this entire textbook so hey guess what!! it's going on my goodreads so sorry. three stars bc why did i actually enjoy reading this? the most interesting textbook i've ever read. not four stars bc hey there don't need to be THAT many pictures of... things.
Profile Image for Emma.
12 reviews
June 11, 2019
I want to say I liked it, because it was really comprehensive, which is often missing in sexology books (at least according to my instructor, I haven't read a lot on the subject). I'm thinking specifically on how it was very interdisciplinary (sociology, cognitive, behaviouralist, biology, many more). That said, it also featured theories and schools of thought which are no longer used, and it could have used less time on those and just mentioned them instead of lingering as if they are equal to new schools of thought and theories that is supported by better understanding and respect and more scientific evidence. (...It was a bit long and I've been considering what parts I would have left out).

However, it had a few things that annoyed me, even though it is probably a general lack of study in the area instead of this specific author not being thorough enough. This was especially evident concerning LGBTQ+, though personally I mostly noticed it in regards to wlw/lesbian parts of it. Carroll tries hard to balance between respectful scientific explanations and pathologizing gender and sexuality that is not cis or hetero. It could be better, it could be worse. If you're looking for a nuanced study of gender and sexuality I would recommend the internet over this, but if you're just starting and not LGBTQ+ it could be a good gateway, I guess.

It felt a little pretentious, overall, but Carroll did seem knowledgable about the subject.

It was very large and unwieldy, which made reading it frustrating. It's physically large, fairly thick, and soft-cover, meaning it needs a (large) flat service to read or a lot of manoeuvring.

Too expensive!! If it's for class I would wait to see if it's absolutely necessary before buying it. If you can rent it or resell it, I guess that's an option.

I feel like I'm being very critical right now, but there was some genuinely interesting things in it! I am probably biased since I didn't realise what exactly Human Sexuality class would be about before taking it, and it apparently includes a lot more biology and chemistry than I feel like I signed up for! And it also helped me discover that though I like most social sciences, I'm not into psychology.

BTW, if you can't handle graphic images of sex, nudity, STIs, etc this is not the book for you. Personally, I would have been fine with it if I had been more prepared to see them or read about difficult subjects. I would probably look for a trigger warning list, if I could recommend something to my future self, but off the top of my head: genital mutilation (female, male, intersex), STIs, death, paedophilia, other paraphilias (benign and less so), death, rape and assault, children being subjected to these as well, and stories/accounts from adults and children who have been through these things, as well as accounts and stories of perpetuators, whom sometimes try to excuse or rationalise or justify these.
Profile Image for Tabitha Donaghue.
11 reviews2 followers
May 31, 2017
I found this text especially great because while it assumes that all humans are equal beings and much more similar to one another than they are different, it takes time in each module of learning to individually address women's perspectives, men's perspectives, gay and trans perspectives, and young adult and elderly adult perspectives.
Profile Image for Marty.
328 reviews
November 21, 2018
While certainly not the worst textbook I've ever read, it's definitely pretentious, preachy, and long-winded. I also have an outdated edition, so I'm sure statistics (and sensitivities) have changed in recent years. It didn't help that this was for a class that I absolutely hated. That may have tainted my opinion just a bit. In conclusion, although I learned a few things, my fondest memory of this book is closing it forever.
Profile Image for Steele.
12 reviews10 followers
June 29, 2025
I read this whole thing for my Pysc class and it is therefore going on my goodreads. I actually quite enjoyed this textbook, it was very insightful and well worded. I’m glad I actually read it, and of course it helped for the class. Info is a bit dated though :(

Side note: I was reading this at a coffee shop and the next page was a picture of a herpes infected genital (😀) was that really nessecary? At least at the top of the page cmon Janell
Profile Image for Christie.
344 reviews42 followers
June 19, 2021
Of all the thousands of books written about sexuality, this was the one picked for our text book? Blech. Hated it. Hated it all. Has an agenda. HATED IT. Read David Schnarch, Jennifer Finlayson-Fife, Emily Nagoski, Terry Real. SKIP THIS PSEUDO INTELLECTUAL DRIBBLE. (I did learn a lot from it, I just prefer to learn without blatant biases.)
Profile Image for Lenny Husen.
1,115 reviews23 followers
August 4, 2014
I have read most/half of this text. It is a decent text with a lot of cool boxes and other bells and whistles, but overall, could be better. I will keep reading it and if will change my review later if indicated.
Some information is lacking, for example, the brief paragraph on Asexuality should have been omitted entirely if the author knows that little about it.
I will keep this book as a reference.
Profile Image for Shawn Kass.
Author 19 books15 followers
December 1, 2013
Interesting college class, but I found very little new material. Most of it was stuff I already knew.
128 reviews16 followers
July 16, 2014
For my Human Sexuality class. It was a more engaging text than most textbooks, but overall I don't feel like I learned a ton.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.