Abstract:The campaign against masturbation offers one of the outstanding success stories in the history of medical popularization. This paper seeks to identify the reasons for this success, focusing on the campaign's early stages, from the late seventeenth century onwards. It first identifies a series of often quite explicit political, ideological, and economic motives such as religious notions of 'uncleaniness', bourgeois concerns about self-control, marriage, and population growth, and the financial interests of the … Show more
“…In the texts of Simon André Tissot (1974), first published in 1758, masturbation was fully medicalized. Tissot paid special attention to the effects of masturbation on the nervous system (Stolberg, 2000). He claimed that masturbation caused an excessive blood flow to the brain that can result in impotence and insanity (Kay, 1992).…”
Section: Masturbation As a Means Of Achieving Sexual Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Western medical profession created the concept of postmasturbatory disease that could cause impotence (Stolberg, 2000). Masturbating women were said to develop an unnaturally enlarged, penis-like clitoris, or to lose their attractiveness.…”
Section: Masturbation As a Means Of Achieving Sexual Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the masturbation neurosis hypothesis, excessive masturbation was claimed to cause draining of sexual energy that could give rise to neurasthenia or neurosis (Kay, 1992). And still, physical damage caused by masturbation was argued to make a person engaged in masturbation incapable Osmo of consummating the marriage or of having children (Stolberg, 2000). The aim of these invented threats was to prevent masturbation via fear and guilt.…”
Section: Masturbation As a Means Of Achieving Sexual Healthmentioning
Each generation has adopted views on masturbation via transforming cultural definitions of sexuality and normality. This article presents how masturbation habits have changed during the last decades in different generations and how these habits are linked to the partnership status. The analysis is based on three national follow-up sex surveys in new generation had been more active in masturbation than the previous one. However, in Estonia masturbation had increased in each generation about 20 years later and in St. Petersburg about 30 years later than in Finland and Sweden. The increase in masturbation was almost unrelated to the relationship status and to the years spent in the relationship. The masturbation habits that each generation had internalized in adolescence seemed to remain unchanged through the course of their lives. The implications of these findings are that masturbation did not decrease with age and that masturbation was not a compensation for a missing sex partner but an independent way to gain sexual pleasure. The results indicate that masturbation is linked to Osmo Kontula is affiliated with The Population Research Institute, The Family Federation of Finland.Elina Haavio-Mannila is affiliated with the
“…In the texts of Simon André Tissot (1974), first published in 1758, masturbation was fully medicalized. Tissot paid special attention to the effects of masturbation on the nervous system (Stolberg, 2000). He claimed that masturbation caused an excessive blood flow to the brain that can result in impotence and insanity (Kay, 1992).…”
Section: Masturbation As a Means Of Achieving Sexual Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Western medical profession created the concept of postmasturbatory disease that could cause impotence (Stolberg, 2000). Masturbating women were said to develop an unnaturally enlarged, penis-like clitoris, or to lose their attractiveness.…”
Section: Masturbation As a Means Of Achieving Sexual Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the masturbation neurosis hypothesis, excessive masturbation was claimed to cause draining of sexual energy that could give rise to neurasthenia or neurosis (Kay, 1992). And still, physical damage caused by masturbation was argued to make a person engaged in masturbation incapable Osmo of consummating the marriage or of having children (Stolberg, 2000). The aim of these invented threats was to prevent masturbation via fear and guilt.…”
Section: Masturbation As a Means Of Achieving Sexual Healthmentioning
Each generation has adopted views on masturbation via transforming cultural definitions of sexuality and normality. This article presents how masturbation habits have changed during the last decades in different generations and how these habits are linked to the partnership status. The analysis is based on three national follow-up sex surveys in new generation had been more active in masturbation than the previous one. However, in Estonia masturbation had increased in each generation about 20 years later and in St. Petersburg about 30 years later than in Finland and Sweden. The increase in masturbation was almost unrelated to the relationship status and to the years spent in the relationship. The masturbation habits that each generation had internalized in adolescence seemed to remain unchanged through the course of their lives. The implications of these findings are that masturbation did not decrease with age and that masturbation was not a compensation for a missing sex partner but an independent way to gain sexual pleasure. The results indicate that masturbation is linked to Osmo Kontula is affiliated with The Population Research Institute, The Family Federation of Finland.Elina Haavio-Mannila is affiliated with the
“…Debates about the link drew on explicit political, ideological and economic motives of the time and included moral, religious notions of 'uncleanliness' and bourgeois concerns about self-control, marriage and population growth. In this way some of the physical and mental symptoms attributed to masturbation successfully addressed deep contemporary societal anxieties about virility, gender identity and physical selfhood (36).…”
Section: Masturbation 'Formerly My Wife Was My Right Hand Now My Rigmentioning
The results of a short sexual health study of 75 male soldiers undertaking humanitarian aid relief in Africa are presented in an historical context relating to sexuality and soldiery.
“…In his study of masturbation in eighteenth-century medical writing Michael Stolberg observes that 'fears of semen loss in ejaculation were indeed an important and persistent feature'. 64 This fear was predicated on 'mechanical philosophy and physiology', which, as Sutton expounds, 'provided newly explicit mechanisms to explain why those partial to the expense of spirits in sexual activity would inevitably lose their intellectual vigour'. 65 These interpretations dovetail with Laqueur's description of a prominent 'moral physiology' pertaining to sexuality at that time.…”
Current scholarship recognises both physiology and sexuality as central elements of the eighteenth‐century culture of sensibility. But scholars have yet really to explore the physiology of sexuality. Through an interdisciplinary approach this article demonstrates the profound resonance of late seventeenth‐century physiological discussions about nerves and animal spirits as the basis for understandings about sexuality and sensibility. Those discussions particularly emphasised specific ways that sex affected the sensible body and rational mind. The physiology of animal spirits – and associated ideas about the body and mind – would underpin representations of sexuality in the art and literature of sensibility in the mid‐eighteenth century.
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