The Legend of Saturday Night by Steven Kurutz
An oral history of the world's most famous disco. *music issue* |
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Sex Advice From Accordion Players by Catherine Adcock
Q: How much is too much masturbation?
A: I don't think there's too much . . . unless it's interfering with your accordion practice. |
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In Good Company by Will Doig
Legendary DJ Mr. Len aims to change hip-hop with his latest title: CEO. *music issue* |
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Inspiration Point by Andy Duncan
A survey of responses to the "what music puts you in the mood?" question on Nerve Personals. *music issue* |
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Smut City by Ryan Kennedy
The filthiest music in the world: Baltimore club.*music issue* |
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Toronto Calling by Bruce LaBruce
Meet the Hidden Cameras, Canada's premier gay socialist sex-worshipping indie-pop symphony. *music issue* |
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The Weekly Pic by Jason Wishnow
Our favorite online video. This week: geek fantasies run amok in a film titled . . . Geek Fantasies. |
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Don't Croon at Me, John Mayer by Amy Keyishian
I'm onto your game. *music issue* |
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Let It Be. . . Naked by Grant Stoddard
Say you want a revelation about the Beatles' sex lives? Tony Bramwell has a few. *music issue* |
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Scanner by Ada Calhoun
Mint condoms, fishing-as-pornography, and racecar driving sexpot Danica Patrick. |
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Postcards From Fist City by Kate Sullivan
The country lyricists' guide to dating, mating and beating down the piece of trash next door. *music issue* |
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Anarchy in the People's Republic by Justin Clark
My punk ambassadorship to China. *music issue* |
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Horoscopes by Neal Medlyn
Your week in sex. |
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That Obscure Object of Desire by Margaret Wappler
We're condescended to, charmingly, by the authors of The Rock Snob's Dictionary. *music issue* |
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Miss Information by Erin Bradley
The orally averse boyfriend; when your partner's sexual past is tough to swallow. |
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Sex Advice From . . . Star Wars Fans by William Bright
Q: What Star Wars fantasy is best played out in the bedroom?
A: Anything with a chase involving lots of male stormtroopers. |
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Afternoon Delight by Patryce Bak
You wouldn't get out of bed either. |
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Bodies, Rest and Motion by Ron Amato
Men of leisure. |
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Film Reviews by Bilge Ebiri and Logan Hill
The Exorcist prequel should have been banished; Tell Them Who You Are is a documentary tribute enlivened by real-life director-subject squabbling. Plus, Date DVD. |
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Sex Advice From . . . Music Critics by Seb Matthews
Q: Describe a new sexual position you've created.
A: I call it the "Rhythm Nation 2005," inspired by my choreography idols Janet Jackson and Paula Abdul. *music issue* |
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Quiet Riot by Adam Kaufman
Four Tet evokes adventure and romance, not just another guy with a laptop. *music issue* |
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If the controversy over Fox Searchlight's forthcoming biopic Kinsey indicates
anything, it is that sexual habits of the average American aren't half
as interesting as sexologists themselves. Family-values firebrand
Judith Reisman and radio shock-jock Dr. Laura Schlessinger have
recently mounted a media campaign against the makers of Kinsey, attempting to place an attack ad in Variety, condemning Kinsey as "a man who produced and directed the rape and torture of infants and children."
In an open letter, Reisman warned Kinsey
star Liam Neeson that the film portrays Kinsey in "a hideously
inaccurate role, much like playing the monster Mengele [the Nazi doctor
who conducted brutal experiments on children] as a mere controversial
figure." As radical as Reisman's rhetoric sounds, many in the sexology
field say they hear it echoing from another quarter: Congress. Last
year, a Republican-backed bill to strip $1.5 million of National
Institute of Health funding for sex research was narrowly defeated in
the House, 212-210. While controversial research projects often
draw scrutiny — the studies in question focused on the sexual habits of
truckers, Asian prostitutes in San Francisco, and gay Native Americans
— they are seldom canceled once funded. The last instance of a sex
study's defunding occurred in 1989, according to University of
Wisconsin sex researcher John DeLamater, when a group of congressmen
led by Jesse Helms succeeded in gutting the largest survey of American
sexual habits since Kinsey. It is a sign, say sex researchers,
that outside the liberal precincts of Hollywood, their field may be in
trouble.
These days sexologists' fears go beyond defunding, says DeLamater, editor of the Journal of Sex Research,
a publication of the Society for the Scientific Study of
Sexuality. "Two former students of mine are blacklisted," says
DeLamater, referring to a list of 150 NIH-funded scientists whose work
was attacked by Republicans last year in Congress. Some of DeLamater's
other students have decided to enter less controversial fields. "I was
blacklisted myself three years ago," he says, "for writing a letter to
the editor of a local newspaper saying that abstinence doesn't work."
Sexology has never been easy to justify to the American taxpayer.
Before Americans became sufficiently aware of their sexuality to
support public funding of its study, sex research largely survived
through private donors, such as the Rockefeller Foundation. Strings
have always been attached, but many sexologists say that under the Bush
administration, those strings have been jerked taut. For many,
the choice is between fighting and fleeing.
Margaret Scarlett, an epidemiologist at the
Center for Disease Control and Prevention, recently quit the agency
after fifteen years. "We're seeing a clear substitution of
ideology for science, and it is causing many committed scientists to
leave the agency," she said in a report released by another scientific
protest group, the Union of Concerned Scientists.
Opposition to the Bush agenda has mobilized
researchers, some of whom have formed a sex-studies advocacy group, the
Coalition to Protect Research. Another organization, the International
Working Group on Sexuality and Social Policy, alleges that NIH staff
has advised grant applicants to avoid using words such as "condom
effectiveness," "transgender," "needle exchange" and abortion in their
applications, so as to elude conservative scrutiny.
Rafael Diaz, a San Francisco State University
sex researcher whose name appeared on the blacklist, is one of
them. "I've thought about toning down things by their names in my
abstracts," he says, explaining that although he receives support from
SFSU, researchers in his field rely heavily on politically vulnerable
organizations such as the NIH for funding. "The politics
interfered with my work."
Ironically, says DeLamater, federal funding for
sex research has increased by three to four percent during the Bush
administration. Although this is a difficult claim to verify,
given the disagreement over what constitutes sex research — HIV
research is a gray area, for instance — a National Institute of Health
spokesman estimates that funding for sex studies has increased from
$220 million to $232 million over the past two years, most of it
devoted to tackling
Interest in the theoretical mysteries of sex has been subverted by politics, money and public misunderstanding. |
AIDS.
But NIH money isn't the whole story: university
budgets for sex research have steadily declined since the 1970s.
According to the Department of Education, state aid accounted for 10%
less of university budgets in 2000 than in 1980, as a result of
cutbacks. At the University of Wisconsin, where DeLamater is
tenured, the state only pays 25% of the budget; a little more than
twice what the national average was in 1980. Meanwhile, another
important funding source, the National Institute of Mental Health,
recently announced that it will shift funding from basic behavioral and
social research to neurological diseases and major mental illnesses —
effectively cutting most sex research out of the pie.
But sex researchers say the health of their field can't be measured in
dollars alone. Even before the recent political attacks, they
worried that interest in the theoretical mysteries of sex, as opposed
to developing policy solutions and therapies, has been subverted by
politics, money, and public misunderstanding.
"We need to get more meaningful information
about sexuality," says Leonore Tiefer, a professor at New York
University's School of Medicine. "Relative to what we could know, we
barely have any at all."
Tiefer and other researchers say that important
areas have been systematically neglected: child and adolescent
sexuality, healthy homosexual relationships, the influence of
upbringing on sexual orientation, and the interface between psychology
and the physiological mechanisms of arousal (i.e., how does the brain
interpret some stimuli as arousing?) and the role of culture, not just
environment, in sexuality.
As a result, Tiefer says, it's no wonder that a
great deal of sex research is being done by the media itself. Informal
magazine polls for a self-selecting group can provide the American
public with a skewed view of what is normal or common. As
sex-savvy as most educated Americans might consider themselves, a
recent Yale study found that regardless of education, most readers are
highly biased by the way newspapers report the causes of gender
difference (as biologically determined or socially constructed).
So as sexology increasingly becomes a tool for
solving problems, rather than engaging the mysteries of sex, what is
the cost? Could it be that science's enthusiasm for sex as a human
enigma, rather than a public or private health problem, has
waned?
Whether or not Americans spend more time
talking about it than doing it, as is often proposed, there's no
denying that we get off on the discovery of sexual knowledge as much as
its application. We stand in supermarket checkout lines,
anxiously skimming the pages of Cosmopolitan's Sex Secrets issue, vainly hoping to learn something new. We distinguish The Joy of Sex and Kama Sutra from magazines like Barely Legal or Stud, but something in the former arouses us on a deeper level than ordinary porn. Could it be that we yearn for the kind of ars erotica that the French historian and philosopher Michel Foucault describes in The History of Sexuality?
"In the erotic arts," he writes, "truth is
drawn from pleasure itself . . . not considered in relation to an
absolute law of the permitted and the forbidden, nor by reference to a
criterion of utility . . . On the face, at least, our
civilization possesses no ars erotica. In return, it is undoubtedly the only civilization to practice a scientia sexualis."
For Foucault, one major difference between other civilizations' ars erotica (sex secrets, not images of sex) and our scientia sexualis
is who seeks the knowledge. The former involves knowledge passed down
from a master to student, via secret initiation. The latter
passes the knowledge of sex up from subject to researcher, via the
West's favorite ritual for producing truth: the confession. Or,
as most of us know it now, the sex survey.
And surveys are problematic. Ethical
guidelines, influenced by cultural politics, often dictate how a study
must be presented to its subjects, thereby influencing the
results. "In the '80s, you would be a potential participant in a
study on porn," says Charlene Senn, researcher at Canada's University
of Windsor. "I'd have to tell you that some of the images you
would see could be sexual or violent, and then you could decide whether
or not to participate. Now I have to tell you that this could
cause you to
The
AIDS epidemic and political conservatives scuttled many of the lines of
investigation inspired by the work of Kinsey and Masters and Johnson. |
be upset or disturbed, so I'm essentially tainting the results."
Studies have also shown that the gender of the
interviewer and the perception of the profession itself can influence a
subject's answers. Because many of the first sexologists gathered data
from their own experiences, it is no coincidence that some of the first
theories of sexuality were produced as confession. In the nineteenth
century, the first admitted homosexual, German Karl Heinrich Ulrichs,
issued a series of pamphlets admitting his own orientation, which he
argued was innate, and demanding more rights for homosexuals. Although
Ulrichs largely failed in that pursuit, the ensuing debate led fellow
German researcher Albert Moll to conclude that "it was the failure of
sexologists to study normal sexuality that lead to their disagreements
about abnormal forms," according to Science in the Bedroom, a seminal work by sex historian Vern Bullough.
Interestingly, Bullough writes, it was here
that capital began to play a role. One reason Freud's work gained
dominance over those of two prominent, more empirically-oriented
twentieth-century colleagues, Magnus Hirschfield and Havelock Ellis,
was that Freud's theories of sexuality suggested possible treatments
for many disorders, giving practicing psychiatrists a reason to study
them. Leaving aside a few "closet researchers," most sexologists
in the States were compelled to justify their work by emphasizing
negative aspects of sex, either for the individual or society:
prostitution, homosexuality, and the spread of STDs.
As the twentieth century progressed, the need
for data finally became apparent, at least to some. Meanwhile, as
women joined the work force, anxiety about the
future
of marriage led to the creation of university-level sex education
courses. One benefit was that a group of research subjects — students —
became available to scientists interested in sex. With few sex
educators to teach the courses, however, professors from other
disciplines had to be recruited. Enter Alfred C. Kinsey, expert on the
gall wasp.
According to Julia Heiman, present director of
the Kinsey Institute, Kinsey's training was critical to a more
intellectually honest approach to sex. "Without naming what's
pathological or not, Kinsey looked at the rare and frequent," says
Heiman. "For someone in his field, it is the variability of a
species that makes it interesting."
Using eighteen thousand interviews, Kinsey
published his two famous volumes on human sexuality, earning the
fascination of the American public, and the criticism of moralists and
even some scientists. "He talked to white middle-aged people, not
seeming to realize that ethnic minorities would be uncomfortable
talking to a white, middle-aged man," says Gail Wyatt, associate
director of UCLA's AIDS Institute.
Nevertheless, Kinsey's data suggested that
homosexuality was far more prevalent than had been previously thought —
the ten percent figure came from his reports — as were other taboo
phenomena, such as female orgasm. In doing so, he paved the way
for subsequent studies of arousal, such as those performed by Masters
and Johnson, and challenged psychoanalysis' century-long reign over
sexuality. Suddenly, sex therapy was born.
But even as his work and the development of
better contraception sparked the sexual revolution, Kinsey's opponents
spread claims, some of them well-founded, of his bisexuality,
wife-swapping and sexual experimentation with colleagues. "Billy
Graham cut his eye teeth on Kinsey when he was starting his ministry,"
says University of Chicago sex researcher Edward Laumann. The tradition
continues today. Ironically, in de-medicalizing and humanizing sex,
Kinsey made himself a vulnerable specimen for analysis.
According to some sex researchers, the AIDS
epidemic and political conservatives scuttled many of the lines of
investigation inspired by the work of Kinsey and Masters and
Johnson. "The Reagan perspective really dampened things, and a lot
of college-based projects were ridiculed on the floor of the Senate.
The Golden Fleece award comes to mind," says Tiefer, referring to the
prize for "wasteful" government initiatives paid for by watchdog group
Taxpayers for Common Sense.
Even as sex researchers scrambled to collect
epidemiological data to guide AIDS prevention policy, they met
resistance from the right. In 1989, Edward Laumann was on the verge of
doing the most comprehensive survey of American sexual habits since
Kinsey. "In January of '89, the beginning of the first Bush presidency,
Science
announced that we were going to do this project, and someone chose to
illustrate the article with a picture of Bob and Alice and Ted and
Carol in bed together," says Laumann. "The Washington Times went ballistic, and the survey was defunded."
With the support of Playboy
magazine, the survey was eventually completed on a much smaller scale,
says Laumann — 3,700 subjects instead of 20,000. Ironically, some
of the data it returned made conservatives happy, lowering estimates of
the frequency of homosexuality. Though Laumann's anecdote
demonstrates that no area of sexology is immune to political
antagonism, AIDS became a haven for sex researchers, by establishing an
area of research that a broader political spectrum could see as
important.
"Unless you want to do AIDS work, you can't get money," says Wyatt, an AIDS researcher herself.
Like Wyatt, Diane DiMauro, director of the
Sexuality Research Fellowship Program, says that other important areas
of research have paid the cost. "I don't think sex research
should be only policy-relevant," DiMauro says. "You want to keep
expanding the knowledge base. We don't know a lot of
developmental information because it's not always policy-relevant."
Even before Viagra, the health-care crisis
affected the way sexual problems were treated, and it limited
non-pharmaceutical approaches to dysfunction. "Most of the
training programs have gone out of existence," says Wyatt. "Sex
therapy is very expensive, and it's not covered by insurance, so we
have fewer researchers who are trained in sexuality."
At the same time, researchers say that the
focus on sexual risk-taking and the transmission of STD's may have
contributed to a negative view of gays. "In my area, gay male
sexuality, most of the big questions are about what gay are men doing
wrong, not what gay men are doing right," says Carrington, currently
engaged in a study of gay male circuit parties. Given how
conservatives have used (or misused, to most scientists) sexologists'
data on HIV transmission and "gay bowel syndrome," Carrington worries
about what kind of impact the focus on studying negative behaviors will
have on the present gay marriage debate. "The last study of the
emotional and psychological aspects of gay relationships
was done in the late 80's. I haven't seen anything get funded since."
The re-medicalization of sex goes beyond
specific groups, says James Elias of California State University
Northridge's Center for Sex Research. "One way to see it is the
number of medical articles being written, as opposed to the number of
non-medical. I think the medical articles on sexual disorders
began to exceed all the other types."
If the last few years have seen a return to the
pathologization of sex, pharmaceutical companies may be partly to
blame. Effective as Viagra is at producing erections, its
discovery was accidental — Bob Dole's little blue wonder was initially
developed to cure arterial blockage. In the past few years, however,
there has been an exodus of researchers from dwindling university
"Any study of remedies for sexual problems, other than drugs, doesn't get funded." |
payrolls
to the growing ones of pharmaceutical companies. "Any study of remedies
for sexual problems, other than drugs, doesn't get funded," says
Tiefer, who has blamed companies like Pfizer for a "tidal wave of
reductionism, wherein sex is pelvic vascular function."
Much has been written, of course, about the
dangers inherent to this reductionist, profit-oriented approach to sex,
and many of those dangers are to public health themselves. Only
one of the fifteen questions on the International Index of Erectile
Function, used to test Viagra's effectiveness, dealt with satisfaction
in the partner relationship. Homosexuals were excluded from
clinical trials, even though recreational nitrate use (which interacts
harmfully with Viagra) is more widespread in the gay community.
Scientists who perform studies for
pharmaceutical companies are typically contractually bound not to share
their results, making it easier for the companies to censor bad
results. This may explain why one British study found that a
lower percentage of pharmaceutical industry research ends up published
than non-sponsored research. One analogy may be found in tobacco
company research. A 1997 survey of 91 behavioral studies found
that tobacco industry-supported studies almost universally found
smoking to improve cognitive performance, while the non-industry
studies were evenly split.
While follow-up studies on the after-effects of
sex drugs typically only last six months, follow-up research for
non-pharmaceutical solutions to sex problems averages five years,
according to one study.
And much like companies such as Phillip Morris,
Pfizer's social irresponsibility may hurt the reputation of the
scientists who work for it, according to Elias. "The moment
Viagra hit the market, Pfizer looked at who was buying it and found out
that it wasn't just the older population, so they changed the ads,"
says Elias. "Now they have baseball players, people in their
thirties and forties. There's no disorder, they're not having a
problem, they're just using it to help out."
According to some, the research community is
beginning to respond. "In Montreal next year, women are
organizing an international counter-conference," says Senn, "to
counteract pharmaceutical companies' vested interest in defining
women's sexual dysfunction as a problem to be solved with a pills."
Almost all sex researchers agree that the
health of their field cannot be quantified in dollars or
erections. Even as funding increases, most researchers see the
direction of their research increasingly constrained by Congress, the
pharmaceutical industry, and the public's desire to have its money
spent on solving social problems such as AIDS, rather than merely
"expanding the knowledge base," as DiMauro puts it.
Does research always lead to solutions? No. Sex science may never be a modern ars erotica.
Nevertheless, it remains the duty of sex researchers, politicians, and
lovers to make sure they find as much pleasure in the truth as they do
truth in pleasure.
n°
| ABOUT THE AUTHOR: |
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A recent graduate of the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, Justin Clark has written for L.A. Weekly, Psychology Today, Black Book, Architecture, Fuse, and The Fader,
among other publications. He is currently researching a history of the
American child prodigy, and writing a mystery novel set in Los Angeles.
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©2004
Justin Clark & Nerve.com |
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