Examples of sexual revolution in the following topics:
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- The Kinsey Report helped spark the sexual revolution, in which social regulations regarding sexual activity were loosened.
- While other sexualities were still stigmatized in most post-Kinsey environments, the sexual revolution was marked by popular acceptance of premarital sex.
- Kinsey's 1950s study of sexuality contributed to the sexual revolution of the 1960s in two ways.
- Another scientific product had a profound impact on the development of the sexual revolution: the development of oral contraception.
- Summarize the impact of the Kinsey Report and the sexual revolution of the 1960s on American sexuality
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- There, he became interested in human sexuality.
- The report refers to two different book publications based on his research of human sexuality: Sexual Behavior in the Human Male (1948) and Sexual Behavior in the Human Female (1953).
- A mere decade after the reports were published, the first oral contraceptive was introduced and the sexual revolution began.
- The sexual revolution was a social movement from the 1960s to the 1980s that increased acceptance of sex outside of marriage.
- Analyze the impact of Kinsey's study of sexuality related to how it changed the public's perception of sexuality and how people are sexually socialized
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- Like most areas of sociology, urban sociologists use statistical analysis, observation or ethnography, social theory, interviews, and other methods to study a range of topics, including migration, economic and demographic trends, as well as things like poverty, race relations, crime, sexuality, and many other phenomena that surface in dynamic cities.
- After the Industrial Revolution sociologists such as Max Weber and Georg Simmel began to focus on the accelerating process of urbanization and the effects it had on feelings of social alienation and anonymity.
- Scholars of the Chicago School originally focused around one integral question: How did an increase in urbanism during the time of the Industrial Revolution contribute to the magnification of then-contemporary social problems?
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- Social context influences sexual behavior; sexuality is expressed and understood through socialized processes.
- Sexual behavior refers to the manner in which humans experience and express their sexuality.
- Human sexual activity has sociological, cognitive, emotional, behavioral and biological elements, including physiological processes such as the reproductive mechanism, the sex drive and pathology; sexual intercourse and sexual behavior in all its forms; and personal bonding and shared emotions during sexual activity.
- Since sexuality is expressed through means learned by socialization, social context is bound to influence sexual behavior.
- For example, sexual activity with a person below some age of consent and sexual assault in general are criminal offenses in most jurisdictions.
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- Sexual orientation refers to enduring emotional, romantic and sexual attraction to the opposite sex, the same sex, both, or neither.
- Sexual identity and sexual behavior are closely related to sexual orientation, but they are distinguishable.
- Sexual identity refers to an individual's conception of their own sexuality, while sexual behavior limits one's understanding of sexuality to behaviors performed.
- The primary tension in conversations about sexual orientation addresses whether sexual orientation is static or fluid, whether one is born with an immutable sexual orientation, or whether one develops sexual orientation.
- Explain the development of sexual orientation (heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual or asexual) in terms of both static and fluid sexuality
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- Sexual violence is any sexual act or sexual advance directed at one individual without their consent.
- Sexual violence is any sexual act or sexual advance directed at one individual without their consent.
- Forms of sexual violence include: rape by strangers, marital rape, date rape, war rape, unwanted sexual harassment, demanding sexual favors, sexual abuse of children, sexual abuse of disabled individuals, forced marriage, child marriage, denial of the right to use contraception, denial of the right to take measures to protect against sexually-transmitted diseases, forced abortion, genital mutilation, forced circumcision, and forced prostitution.
- On a global scale, international sexual violence is difficult to track because of extreme variation in sexual mores.
- Sexual violence is severly under reported.
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- One learns from society how to express one's sexuality.
- This indicates that there are no universal sexual norms.
- Obviously, this is a basic schematic; it does not capture all of the existing ways in which people behave sexually, but it is the basic rubric by which sexual behaviors are evaluated.
- In contrast, the Ancient Greeks categorized sexuality not in terms of homosexuality and heterosexuality, but in terms of active and passive sexual subjects.
- The interactions of homosexual sexual acts and their (il)legality provides an opportunity to see how the law both mirrors and molds American understandings of sexual norms.
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- Sexual harassment is intimidation, bullying, teasing, or coercion of a sexual nature.
- Sexual harassment is intimidation, bullying, teasing, or coercion of a sexual nature, or the unwelcome or inappropriate promise of rewards in exchange for sexual favors.
- Sexual harassment does not have to be only of a sexual nature; indeed, sexual harassment includes unwelcome and offensive comments about a person's gender.
- Even though sexual harassment is less violent than other forms of sexual violence such as rape, victims still suffer serious consequences.
- However, sexual harassment is more socially acceptable.
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- Although a relatively new field of social science research, relationships between sexualities and aging are quite intriguing.
- Rather than a monolithic sexual career delimited between stages of aging, for example, researchers have revealed a wide variety of sexual practices, patterns, and cultural debates throughout the life course, and in so doing, have complicated previous assumptions regarding aging and sexual activity.
- Similarly, researchers have shown that people - as late as ages 70 and 80 - often maintain and desire active sexual lives.
- Further, researchers (dating back to at least the 1940's) have consistently demonstrated that sexualities shift and change in varied and nuanced ways throughout the life course, and that people establish, maintain, and / or adapt sexual beliefs, identities, practices, and desires via ongoing biological and social experiences and evolution throughout their lives.
- Finally, recent reveals similar influences upon sexual and gender politics among heterosexual respondents, but to date, little systematic research has explored this topic.
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- When taking these chattels across national borders, it is referred to as human trafficking, especially when these slaves provide sexual services.
- Due to these factors, the practice of slavery would have only proliferated after the invention of agriculture during the Neolithic Revolution about 11,000 years ago.
- Although the trans-Atlantic slave trade ended shortly after the American Revolution, slavery remained a central economic institution in the southern states of the United States, from where slavery expanded with the westward movement of population.