Mayo offers an invaluable answer to the burning question “How does power circulate?” through her compelling account of the interplay of policy, politics, and philosophy that shapes sex education in public schools. Disputing the Subject of Sex illustrates with remarkable lucidity how diverse conceptions of identity shape legislation and lived experience of what can and cannot be spoken within the contested “public” of schools. Through even-handed analysis of controversies surrounding such topics as AIDS, condoms, and sexuality, the book invites readers across disciplines and political spectrums to see precisely how ideas of “normal” and “deviant” are constructed through theory and practice.