The Social Organization of Sexuality: Sexual Practices in the United StatesUniversity of Chicago Press, 15. 12. 2000 - Počet stran: 750 The Social Organization of Sexuality reports the complete results of the nation's most comprehensive representative survey of sexual practices in the general adult population of the United States. This highly detailed portrait of sex in America and its social context and implications has established a new and original scientific orientation to the study of sexual behavior. "The most comprehensive U.S. sex survey ever." —USA Today "The findings from this survey, the first in decades to provide detailed insights about the sexual behavior of a representative sample of Americans, will have a profound impact on how policy makers tackle a number of pressing health problems." —Alison Bass, The Boston Globe "A fat, sophisticated, and sperm-freezingly serious volume. . . . This book is not in the business of giving us a good time. It is in the business of asking three thousand four hundred and thirty-two other people whether they had a good time, and exactly what they did to make it so good." —Anthony Lane, The New Yorker New York Times Book Review Notable Book of the Year |
Obsah
Theoretical Background | 3 |
Explaining Sexual Content | 5 |
Sexual Decision Making | 8 |
The Sexual Dyad | 16 |
15 Interrelations among the Theories | 24 |
16 Master Statuses and Master Relationships as Social Signals | 30 |
The Study Design | 35 |
21 Major Issues in Designing a Study of Sexuality in the Age of AIDS | 42 |
91 First Vaginal Intercourse and Youthful Heterosexuality | 322 |
92 ForcedCoerced Sex in Adulthood | 333 |
93 Adult and Adolescent Sexual Contacts with Children | 339 |
94 Conclusion | 347 |
Part III | 349 |
Sex Health and Happiness | 351 |
102 Sexual Correlates of Happiness and Health | 357 |
103 Sexual Satisfaction | 363 |
22 On Privacy Confidentiality and Security | 71 |
Part II | 75 |
Sexual Practices and Profiles of Sexual Expression | 77 |
31 Sexual Practices | 80 |
32 Sexual Techniques with OppositeGender Partners | 96 |
33 Sexual Relationships and Contextual Action | 121 |
34 Profiles of Sexual Expression | 133 |
35 Conclusion | 145 |
Appendix 31A Construction of the Religion Variable for Protestant Respondents | 146 |
The Social Organization of Subjective Sexual Preferences | 148 |
The Number of Partners | 172 |
51 The Number of Partners over Specific Time Intervak | 175 |
52 The Cumulative Number of Partners by Age and Time Period | 194 |
53 The Number of Sex Partners before during and following First Union | 203 |
54 Multivariate Analysis of the Number of Partners | 216 |
Construction of the Variable PART12 Number of Partners in the Last Twelve Months | 221 |
Construction of the Variable PART18 Number of Partners since Age Eighteen | 222 |
Sexual Networks | 225 |
61 Master Statuses and the Partnering Process | 228 |
62 Social Networks and the Partnering Process | 233 |
63 Homophily among Noncohabitational Partnerships | 243 |
64 The Consequences of Specific Partnering Strategies | 254 |
65 The Structure of BetweenGroup Contact | 262 |
66 Conclusion | 266 |
Epidemiological Implications of Sexual Networks | 269 |
Homosexuality | 283 |
81 Prior Research on the Prevalence of Homosexuality | 286 |
82 The Myth of 10 Percent and the Kinsey Research | 287 |
83 Dimensions of Homosexuality | 290 |
84 Measurement and Prevalence of SameGender Behavior Desire and Identity | 292 |
85 The Interrelation of SameGender Sexual Behavior Desire and Identity | 298 |
86 The Relation of Master Statuses and SameGender Sexuality | 302 |
87 Conclusion | 320 |
Formative Sexual Experiences | 321 |
104 Sexual Dysfunction | 368 |
105 Conclusion | 374 |
Sexually Transmitted Infections | 376 |
111 Lifetime and Annual Rates of STIs | 378 |
112 Risky Partners and Risky Practices | 391 |
113 The Sexual Behavior of Those Infected with STIs | 422 |
114 Reactions to the Risk of Infection | 427 |
The Logistic | 440 |
Sex and Fertility | 442 |
121 The Pattern of Fertility | 443 |
122 Fertility Control | 448 |
123 The Outcome of Conceptions | 455 |
124 Age at Birth of the First Child | 465 |
125 Conclusion | 473 |
Sex Cohabitation and Marriage | 475 |
131 Age of Entry into a First Marriage or Cohabitation | 476 |
132 The Choice of a Marriage or a Cohabitational Union | 491 |
133 The Stability of Partnerships | 496 |
134 Conclusion | 508 |
Normative Orientations toward Sexuality | 509 |
141 Different Normative Orientations | 510 |
142 The Distribution of Orientations within Master Status Groups | 518 |
143 Normative Orientations and Sexual Behavior | 529 |
144 Normative Orientations and Sexual Preferences | 536 |
145 Conclusion | 537 |
Epilogue | 541 |
Sampling Procedures and Data Quality | 549 |
Comparisons of the NHSLS with Other Data Sets | 571 |
The NHSLS Questionnaire | 606 |
References | 679 |
Author Index | 707 |
712 | |
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
abortion adult age eighteen anal intercourse anal sex appealing asked attitudes autoerotic autoeroticism birth cohort Black chapter cluster cohabitational condom cunnilingus distribution effect estimates fellatio female frequency gender gonorrhea groups high school higher Hispanic HIV/AIDS homophily homosexuality individuals infection interview involved Kinsey last sexual event less lifetime living male marital status marriage married master status variables masturbation measures NHSLS Unwtd NHSLS Wave number of partners number of sex oral sex orgasm orientation past 12 months past twelve months pattern percent percentages person population primary partner proportion questionnaire questions race/ethnicity rates relation religion religious respondents risk same-gender partners sample scripts secondary partner sex partners sexual activity sexual behavior sexual networks sexual partnerships sexual practices sexual relationships sexually transmitted sexually transmitted infections Someone specific spouse STIs survey tion Type II Protestant vaginal intercourse women report