364 Chapter
11
Sexuality and Gender
dramatic shifts from one generation to another in defi nitions of what constitutes
appropriate sexual behavior. People can and should make their own personal value
judgments about what is appropriate in their own sex lives, but there are few uni-
versally accepted absolute rights and wrongs.
Surveying Sexual Behavior:
What’s Happening Behind
Closed Doors?
For most of recorded history, the vast variety of sexual practices remained shrouded
in ignorance. However, in the late 1930s, biologist Alfred Kinsey launched a series
of surveys on the sexual behavior of people in the United States. The result was the
fi rst comprehensive attempt to see what people were actually doing sexually and
was highlighted by the publication of Kinsey’s landmark volumes,
Sexual Behavior
in the Human Male (Kinsey et al., 1948) and
Sexual Behavior in the Human Female
(Kinsey et al., 1953).
Kinsey’s efforts represented the fi rst major systematic approach to learning about
human sexual behavior. Kinsey and his colleagues interviewed tens of thousands of
individuals, and the interview techniques they devised are still regarded as exemplary
because of their ability to elicit sensitive information without causing embarrassment.
On the other hand, Kinsey’s samples refl ected an overrepresentation of college
students, young people, well-educated individuals, urban dwellers, and people liv-
ing in Indiana and the northeast (Kirby, 1977). Furthermore, as with all surveys
involving volunteer participants, it is unclear how representative his data are of
people who refused to participate in the study. Similarly, because no survey observes
behavior directly, it is diffi cult to assess how accurately people’s descriptions of what
they do in private match their actual sexual practices.
Kinsey’s work set the stage for later surveys. But due to political reasons (the
use of government funding for sex surveys is controversial), surprisingly few com-
prehensive, large-scale, representative surveys—either in the United States or in other
countries—have been carried out since Kinsey did his initial work (Pinkerton et al.,
2003). However, by examining the common results gleaned from different samples
of subjects, we now have a reasonably complete picture of contemporary sexual
practices—to which we turn next.
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