Kinsey Reports Essays

  • Alfred Kinsey FBI File Analysis

    1710 Words  | 4 Pages

    Alfred Kinsey was an American Professor of biology and zoology at Indiana University. During his career he decided to shift his focus from studying gull wasps to that of human subjects. He embarked on a study of human sexual behavior by doing a series of interviews consisting of 18,000 people. The first installment of nine books was “Sexual Behavior in the Human Male.” This 30 year project was anything but non-controversial especially with in the realm of the FBI and the United States government

  • Analysis Of The Sado-Masochism

    1058 Words  | 3 Pages

    The moderate types of sadomasochism represent the Alfred Kinsey stated in his 1953 nonfiction book Sexual Behavior in the Human Female that 12% of females and 22% of males reported having an erotic response to a sadomasochistic story(direct quote Wikipedia). The Australian study performed in 2001 showed that 1.8% of people engaged in sexual activities had practiced BSDM at least once. On the other hand, the 1990 Kinsey Institute’s report showed that 5-10% of the sexually active population engaged

  • Alfred Kinsey Research Papers

    746 Words  | 2 Pages

    Alfred Kinsey, as described in the film “Kinsey” by Bill Condon and research articles, was an openness man determined to discover and reveal the truth behind the sexual behaviors of the American population. Moreover, he challenged beliefs regarding human sexuality. Being knowledgeable about sex was viewed as something immoral; a topic only a physician was to talk about simply because they knew body parts. In fact, people had no idea what masturbation meant or what being “normal” during sexual activity

  • Discourse of Sex and the Creation of Docile Bodies

    1118 Words  | 3 Pages

    Discourse of Sex and the Creation of Docile Bodies Subjection is a process that operates in society, and according to sociologist Michel Foucault, can be applied to a multiplicity of discourses. Foucault explains that the beginning of the nineteenth century marked the age of sexual repression and censorship, which became a time of subjection through exerting disciplinary control over a docile population. In his The Introduction to the History of Sexuality, Foucault explains how the scientification

  • Theme Of Desire In The Handmaids Tale

    1159 Words  | 3 Pages

    Kandace Nassir Professor Doucet April 17, 2014 Gender, Sexuality, and Desire Throughout the novel, “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood, she portrays how Offred and other characters desperately use desire, gender, and sexuality in the novel to convey the theme. She begins with the first-person narrator, Offred, by describing the old school gymnasium where she sleeps, and how she feels like she is lost in the atmosphere. She works in a house that is run by a married Commander, and the narrator

  • Human Sexuality Research of Masters and Johnson

    847 Words  | 2 Pages

    gynecologist, was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1915. Virginia Eshelman Johnson, a psychologist, was born in Springfield, Montana in 1925. To fully appreciate their contribution, it is necessary to see their work in historic context. In 1948, Alfred C. Kinsey and his co-workers, responding to a request by female students at Indiana University for more information on human sexual behavior, published the book Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. They followed this five years later with Sexual Behavior in the

  • Gender and Sexuality in The Piano

    1968 Words  | 4 Pages

    Gender and Sexuality in The Piano The Piano examines the construction of sexuality in nineteenth century colonial New Zealand within the discourses of power that shaped this era. Different discourses of gender and race and their interactions are presented in order to support a narrative critique of the European patriarchal ideology as dominant social structure. In the opening sequence of the film, the viewer is immediately presented with an image of marriage as entirely contractual: "Today

  • Essay On Sensory Experience

    2511 Words  | 6 Pages

    Sensory experience refers to any activity that stimulates one of the five senses. It is a culturally embedded, socially collective and physically embodied phenomenon that provides an instinctive dimension to identity. Imposing directly on our day-to-day lives, sensory experience marks similarity and difference in social practice in immediate and unspoken ways. In this essay I will discuss how sexual experience in the writings of George Orwell is used to highlight a limited sensory experience in

  • Sexuality Reflection

    1025 Words  | 3 Pages

    understand and respect the amount of diversity human sexuality has from person to person. Some examples that had the largest impact where seeing videos in class covering transgender persons and their outlook and struggles with the process, and the research Kinsey did on sexual orientation with his Continuum of Sexuality on a scale from 0 to 6. This outcome stood out to me the most, because it’s the one that I recall often in my day to day life

  • What Is God 's View Of Sexuality

    1940 Words  | 4 Pages

    Like many people in our time, Christians are studying and discussing issues related to human sexuality over many years. What is God’s view of sexuality? How are the pressures from a broader culture and the development of technology affecting God’s role in regards to human sexuality in tomorrow 's society? These questions arise from our own desires as Christians to reflect a biblically sound attitude towards sexuality and relationships. That same desire to act according to biblical scriptures is

  • Sexual Harassment and Diversity in the Workplace

    643 Words  | 2 Pages

    Introduction Workforce diversity is a new term in business and industry. It is a term that is still uncommon in various areas of the world. Diversity can be considered by taking two different perspectives. Firstly, there are those fundamental individual attributes that make everyone on the earth unique for example disability, personality among others. Secondly, there are those differences that exist based on group membership for example race, ethnicity, and cultural differences among others (Barak

  • Theories Of Teacher Sex Scandals

    1028 Words  | 3 Pages

    When looking into a criminal event as serious as presented with teacher sex scandals, it is very important to identify the reasons why this crime is taking place and set into motion a plan of action to eliminate other potential perpetrators. The labeling theory suggests that the crime of female teacher sex scandals may have taken place because either the “public” has labeled her role to be provocative or seductive, inappropriately, or that her role as the teacher, has been labeled that way in that

  • Substance Abuse Case Study

    1810 Words  | 4 Pages

    Case Study Jovan is a 23year-old African-American male, who has voluntarily admitted himself for inpatient treatment at a local non-profit agency due to abuse of alcohol and other drugs. Jovan has been unemployed for the past 9 months; his employment position with Dollar General was terminated due to charges of embezzlement. He admits that he took money from the register but planned to replace it when he got paid. So, Jovan is currently unemployed, homeless, and has charges pending due to embezzlement

  • Essay On Sexual Expression

    1528 Words  | 4 Pages

    The way in which we view and engage in sexual expression has had a profound influence on society’s customs, behaviors and beliefs since prehistoric times. The society in which we live in today is built upon past sexual ideologies evolving through the adaptations of societal normalities. The role in which sex plays is our society is indisputably controversial, but is an integral part to the evolution of mankind. Within the twentieth-century, the western world has witnessed a sexual revolution due

  • The Impact of the Sexual Revolution on Choices Related to Sex

    1822 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the study and discovery of human life and development, the inquiry of sexual development and behavior has greatly changed and impacted the course of human history. Human sexuality refers to “sex, gender identities and roles, sexual orientation, eroticism, pleasure, intimacy and reproduction. It is experienced and expressed in thoughts, fantasies, desires, beliefs, attitudes, values, behaviors, practices, roles and relationships.” (WHO, 2006a) The major shift towards human sexuality in America

  • Alfred Kinsey and William Masters and Virginia Johnson: Were They Ethical?

    1629 Words  | 4 Pages

    scientific method and rules of ethics. The experiments of Alfred Kinsey and the scientific team of William Masters and Virginia Johnson have been criticized for their methods of research and sense of ethics. Both scientific teams researched human sexuality, a topic in which is perpetually scrutinized. Kinsey and Masters and Johnson were not always ethical in their studies, and did not always follow the scientific method. Alfred Kinsey is best known for his research in male and female sexual behaviors

  • Pololygamy: The Latest Sexual Revolution: Polyamory

    2036 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Latest Sexual Revolution: Polyamory There is one day out of the year when you see sights of couples everywhere: Valentine’s Day. You see individuals out in stores buying roses, large teddy bears and grabbing the last remaining chocolate candy boxes that are left on the shelves. But if you are imagining a man and a woman as the couple you’re visioning, you are in for a surprise. A man and a woman isn’t the only way to go through life as how a couple should look. In fact, it is estimated over 100

  • The Importance Of Sexuality

    1778 Words  | 4 Pages

    Sexuality has become a controversial topic among psychologists and medical professionals of different countries. Some researchers says, “That sex and sexuality have become almost perversely definitional of who humans are at this historical moment is cause for both celebration and complaint.”(APA) Human sexuality plays a main role in everyone's life. Whether we are child or an adult, male or female, black or white, it is a vital part of what we do and who we are. The topic of sexuality has been closely

  • Sexuality Reflection Paper

    1324 Words  | 3 Pages

    As the world is continuously changing in a rapid pace, more and more information about human sexuality that is associated with transgender, bisexual, asexual, and other issues on gender and sexual orientation is needed to understand the brain function, behavior and belief of these kind of people. As a Christian professional in the psychology field, the understanding of human sexuality is important. This profession inevitably deals with people every day, so sexuality has to be incorporated in various

  • Thank You For Smoking by Jason Reitman

    901 Words  | 2 Pages

    and “Kinsey,” directed by Bill Condon, main characters Nick Naylor and Dr. Alfred Kinsey, defend their actions with either facts, strong opinions, and in Naylor’s instance, symbolism. Hence, both have dynamic characteristics that make them persuasive when proving their points. In both films, there are two questions that are raised. Are their actions justified and reflected in societal morals? Are they trying to route people into a less prejudice mindset? Despite their approach, both Dr. Kinsey and