8. TRANSSEXUAL PEOPLE
• people who feel they are one sex
even though biologically they are
the other.
Examples:
Kevin Balot
Thomas Beatie
9.
10.
11. The truth is…
• Beatie, who was born a woman, had a
surgery to remove his breasts and
legally changed his sex from female
to male.
12. • For humans, sex is a matter of cultural
meaning and personal choice rather than
biological programming.
• Sexual practices vary considerably from
one society to another (examples include
kissing, ideas about modesty, and
standards of beauty).
13. a norm
forbidding sexual relations or marriage
between certain relatives
• exists in all societies because
regulating sexuality, especially
reproduction, is a necessary element
of social organization.
• specific taboos vary from one society
to another.
14. • The Sexual Revolution
• The Sexual Counterrevolution
• Premarital Sex
• Sex between Adults
• Extramarital Sex
• Sex over the Life Course
15. • peaked in the 1960s and 1970s
• drew sexuality out into the open
• Baby boomers were the first
generation to grow up with the idea
that sex was a normal part of social
life.
16. • which began around 1980
• aimed criticism at ―permissiveness‖
• urged a return to more traditional
―family values.‖
19. Among all U.S. adults, sexual activity varies:
• 1/3 report having sex with a partner a few times
a year or not at all;
• Another 1/3 have sex once to several times a
month;
• The remaining 1/3 have sex two or more times a
week.
Example:
Sex and the City tv show
20. - commonly called as ―adultery‖.
• widely viewed as wrong
• just 25 percent of married men and10
percent of married women report
being sexually unfaithful to their
spouses at some time.
21. • Most young men become sexually active
by the time they reach sixteen and women
by the age of seventeen.
22. - a person’s romantic and emotional
attraction to another person.
Four Sexual Orientation
1. HETEROSEXUALITY
- norm in all human societies
- sexual attraction to someone
of the other sex.
27. • Sexual Orientation: A Product of
Society
• Sexual Orientation: A Product of
Biology
28. • gained strength during the 1960s
• The gay rights movement also began using
the term homophobia to describe
discomfort over close personal interaction
with people thought to be gay, lesbian, or
bisexual (Weinberg, 1973).
29. 1. Teen Pregnancy - pregnancy in
human females under the
age of 20 at the time that the
pregnancy ends.
30. 2. Pornography - is
sexually explicit material
intended to cause
sexual arousal.
33. • 1. Call girls - are elite prostitutes, typically
young, attractive, and well-educated women who
arrange their own ―dates‖ with clients by
telephone.
• 2. Employed in ―massage parlors‖ or brothels under the
control of managers - have less choice about their
clients, receive less money for their
services, and get to keep no more than half of
the money they earn.
• 3. Streetwalkers - women and men who ―work the
streets‖ of large cities around the country. Some female
streetwalkers are under the control of male pimps
who take most of their earnings. Many others are
people with a substance addiction who sell sex in
order to buy drugs.
34. • Most prostitutes offer heterosexual
services.
• However, gay male prostitutes also trade
sex for money. Researchers report that
many gay prostitutes end up selling sex
after having suffered rejection by family
and friends because of their sexual
orientation (Weisberg, 1985; Boyer, 1989;
Kruks, 1991).
35. • Rape – a violent act that uses sex to
hurt, humiliate, or control another person
• Date Rape – also known as ―acquaintance
rape‖ is used to refer to forcible sexual violence
against women by men they know
36.
37. •
highlights society’s need to regulate sexual
activity and especially reproduction. One
universal norm is the incest taboo, which keeps
family relations clear.
•
emphasizes the various meanings people attach
to sexuality. The social construction of sexuality
can be seen in sexual differences between
societies and in changing sexual patterns over
time.
38. • links
sexuality to social inequality. Feminist theory claims that
men dominate women by devaluing them to the level of
sexual objects. Queer theory claims our society has a
heterosexual bias, defining anything different as ―queer.‖
39. • - a body of research findings that
challenges the heterosexual bias
in U.S. society
• - a view that labels anyone who is
not heterosexual as ―queer‖